AN INVESTIGATION OF THE IMPORTANCE OF THE PARENTAL …
Transcript of AN INVESTIGATION OF THE IMPORTANCE OF THE PARENTAL …
AN INVESTIGATION OF THE IMPORTANCE OF THE
PARENTAL ROLE IN THE SPIRITUAL EDUCATION
OF ELEMENTARY SCHOOL-AGED CHILDREN
______________________
A Dissertation
Presented to
the Faculty of
of the Terry School of Church and Family Ministries
Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary
______________________
In Partial Fulfillment
of the Requirements for the Degree
Doctor of Educational Ministries
_______________________
By
Brady Andrew Blevins
May 2012
Copyright © 2012 Brady Andrew Blevins
All rights reserved. Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary has permission to
reproduce and disseminate this document in any form by any means for purposes chosen
by the Seminary, including, without limitation, preservation, or instruction.
APPROVAL SHEET
AN INVESTIGATION OF THE IMPORTANCE OF THEPARENTAL ROLE IN THE SPIRITUAL EDUCATION
OF ELEMENTARY SCHOOL-AGED CHILDREN
Brady Andrew Blevins
___________________________________________________Paul Stutz, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Administration and Church Recreation and Associate Dean forMaster’s Program, Supervisor
___________________________________________________Chris Shirley, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Adult Ministry
___________________________________________________Glen Schmucker, D.Min., Pastor, Grace Fellowship Church,Field Supervisor
Date_________________________________
To Jennifer,
my wife and encourager
and to
Drew and Madison,
my precious gifts from God to whom I hope tofulfill my parental responsibilities
and to
Herbert and Rita
my father and mother who laid the foundationof biblical truth in my life
Acknowledgement to
The Ridge Baptist Church and Tate Springs Baptist Church
for support and assistance in helping me serve my Savior, Jesus Christ
ABSTRACT
AN INVESTIGATION OF THE IMPORTANCE OF THEPARENTAL ROLE IN THE SPIRITUAL EDUCATION
OF ELEMENTARY SCHOOL-AGED CHILDREN
This dissertation investigates the importance of the parents’ role as the primary
spiritual educators of their elementary school-aged children. Participants were equipped
to teach their children biblical truths through the use of object lessons in an attempt to
fulfill Deuteronomy 6:4-9.
Chapter 1 introduces the ministry setting, writer’s background, community’s
culture, and demographic data surrounding the area where the research took place, and
the purpose of the research.
Chapter 2 establishes the theological foundation for the role of parents in terms
of discipline and spiritual education of children. Analysis of biblical texts relating to the
parental role of educating children is provided. In addition to the examination of the
biblical evidence of the importance of the parental role, a review of literature is provided,
accompanied by a historical review of evidence relating to the parental role of educator.
Chapter 3 describes how the research will be constructed, including an
introduction and explanation of the instruments used in the research study. Goals are
established, along with a description of measurement tools, project procedures, and a
review of the resources. Assumptions are made with consideration to the limitations, and
key definitions are revealed.
Chapter 4 reports on each session of the study individually, describing the
events of the sessions with emphasis on important occurrences during each session.
Chapter 5 provides a summary of the conclusions made from the research, as
well as suggesting improvements and alternatives for further research.
Brady Andrew Blevins, D.Ed.Min.Advisor: Paul Stutz, Ph.D.Jack D. Terry School of Church and Family MinistrySouthwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2012
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter Page
1. PROBLEM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Ministry Setting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Community Culture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Need Validation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Purpose Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Candidate Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
2. PERSPECTIVES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Biblical Evidence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Historical Evidence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
Review of Literature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
Value of Parental Monitoring . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
Scaffolding Used as a Technique of TrainingSchool-aged Children . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
Fowler’s Six Stages of Faith Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
Religious Identity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
Mother’s Role . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
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Chapter Page
Father’s Role . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
Parents’ Role in Education . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
Implications for Use . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
3. THE PLAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
Purpose Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
Population . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Goals and Outcomes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Measurement Tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
Procedures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
Resources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
Assumptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
Limitations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
Key Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
4. PROJECT REPORT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
Session Reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
Session One . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
Session Two . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
Session Three . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69
Session Four . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
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Chapter Page
Session Five . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75
Session Six . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82
5. PROJECT EVALUATION AND ANALYSIS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
Goal One . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
Attitude . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85
Acuity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87
Activity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
Goal Two . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92
Plan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93
Implementation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94
Leader Evaluation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97
Implications for Further Study . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98
Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101
Appendix
1. PARENT QUESTIONNAIRE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
2. PARENT INTERVIEW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105
3. ENROLLMENT CARD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107
4. LESSON PLANS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108
5. READY-MADE OBJECT LESSONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110
6. WEEKLY JOURNAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128
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Appendix Page
7. PROJECT ADVERTISEMENT POSTERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129
8. PROJECT ADVERTISEMENT BULLETIN INSERTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130
9. PROJECT ADVERTISEMENT FLYERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131
10. LEADERSHIP EVALUATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132 BIBLIOGRAPHY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133
1
CHAPTER 1
PROBLEM
Introduction
A clear command rang in the ears of every Hebrew parent as the children of
Israel journeyed from their past imprisonment in Egypt to the freedom and blessings of
the Promised Land. God’s command to His people was for the parents to educate their
children, not just in terms of the mundane tasks of living and surviving in the wilderness,
but to be the primary source of spiritual knowledge and godly living. The parents’ role as
educators, specifically spiritual educators, was clear in the period in which the Old
Testament was written. God considered the activity of spiritual education to be crucial,
and it should be noted that the parents are commissioned to be the ones to fulfill this
command. Deuteronomy 6 sets forth the commandment to love God with all of one’s
heart, soul, and strength. Parents are then instructed to share the truths of God’s Word as
they live their daily lives.1 While few would argue the necessity of nomadic people
educating their children in daily living, trades, and even spiritual matters, one must ask
“does this command still hold relevance in modern times?”
1Deut 6:4-9. Unless indicated otherwise, all Scripture references will be taken
from the New King James Version (NKJV).
2
Contemporary culture asserts the same need for parental involvement that
research substantiates.2 The overriding need for and importance of parental involvement
crosses religious lines.3 Thus the parents’ ability to influence their children’s thinking and
behavior holds significance. The following study and subsequent research will consider
the parental involvement within the context of the spiritual education of school-aged
children.
Ministry Setting
For eleven years, Brady Blevins has been involved in ministry to a suburban
population. The first eight years were spent in economically depressed and educationally
challenged neighborhoods. The last three years, ministry involvement has been in an area
where the average annual income is $69,205, and 61 percent of the population possess
degrees or is attending college.4 Despite the two differing ministry settings, one
observation was made in both areas of service. The observation of the lack of parental
involvement in the spiritual education of elementary school-aged children (defined by
grades kindergarten-through-fourth, ages five-to-eleven) appeared to be just as prevalent
in the lower income and educated communities as in the more affluent and educated
community.
2W. H. Jeynes, “Effects of Parental Involvement on the Academic
Achievement of Adolescents,” a paper presented at the annual conference of the
American Psychological Association, Washington, D.C., 2000.
3Academic Search Complete, “Faith-full Parenting Moves into the
Mainstream” [accession number 727778] [on-line]; accessed 24 May 2011; available
from http://web.ebscohost.com.aaron.swbts.edu/ehost/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?sid=ce5576
7d-e7c4-4681-b212-fe4ad80c5024%40sessionmgr104&vid=8&hid=126; Internet.
4Percept Group, Inc., “Ministry Area Profile Census 2000,” 1990-2010, 8.
3
Parents have reported to this writer a certain level of frustration between a
desire to share various teachings of the Scripture with their children, but the failure to do
so due to a lack of personal understanding of Bible doctrine. In consideration of the
demographical research, the problem does not appear to be with this segment of the
population’s ability to learn. Rather, the issue within this particular people group seems
to be a combination of the lack of doctrinal knowledge and ability to teach children these
truths. Demographic data shows that just fewer than 48 percent of the people living
within a five-mile radius of this writer’s ministry setting prefer a Bible study discussion
and prayer group as the most important avenue of spiritual growth and development.5
Based on the demographic data provided, a conclusion may be inferred that the people
who comprise this ministry setting would be open to a Bible-study type group that would
provide biblical teaching and a model for instruction to disseminate these spiritual truths
to children.
Tate Springs Baptist Church is a 129 year-old church that has anchored the
growing community in southwest Arlington, Texas. In 1882, the beginning of what
would be Tate Springs was established by a group consisting of five confederate soldiers
who desired to see a meeting place and school.6 Prior to the construction of a meeting
place and school, only one school existed on the east side of town, with no presence of a
5Percept Group, Inc., “Ministry Area Profile Compass Report,” 1990-2010, 2.
6Ray Gammon, “History of Tate Springs Baptist Church Arlington, Texas”
(2003) [on-line]; accessed 31 May 2011; available from http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.
com/~txtarran/places/tatesprings.htm; Internet.
4
Baptist church in the community.7 Through irregular church services and the apparent
work of the parents in the home, the children of the community began to accept Christ,
and the need for an established church became paramount. Therefore, on February 5,
1882, a group of ten believers united to establish Tate Springs Baptist Church.8
Since the late days of the nineteenth century, Tate Springs has grown to be a
light to the community and a picture of stability and strength for the residents in the area.
One of the core values of the ministry setting is the emphasis placed on the family. The
church has worked to combine its love for the family and concern for the community by
hosting a number of activities throughout the year, with special emphases during the
summer that allows families to participate in activities that encourage family
togetherness. The church enjoys a firm financial foundation, which allows them to
achieve the ministerial objectives God has led them to accomplish.
The Kingdom impact Tate Springs has made over the years has affected
innumerable lives. The church has planted or assisted in the planting of over five
congregations—most recently, The Ridge Baptist Church, which this writer currently
serves as the lead pastor. Tate Springs is the primary sponsor church for the Ridge, and is
its most recent addition to the current ministries of the church. In addition to the church
plant ministry of Tate Springs, the church has a Christian school as one of its tools in
Kingdom expansion. The church has enjoyed a history of stability and increased growth,
seeing a great increase of residents in the years following World War II. Like the city of
Arlington, Tate Springs witnessed remarkable growth occurring in the 1970s and 1980s.
7Ibid.
8Ibid.
5
Tate Springs has an average age of forty-seven, with a sizeable portion of
membership being adults with school-aged children. The average Sunday morning
attendance is approximately six hundred, with a resident membership of around twelve
hundred. The church values family, and has crafted their programming with the family in
mind. On Sunday evenings during the school year, they offer the AWANA Bible
program that emphasizes scripture memorization. Additionally, the church uses the
Elevate curriculum in their children’s worship that runs parallel to the adult worship.
Elevate places an emphasis on teaching doctrine and biblical principles for daily living.
In addition, the curriculum encourages parents to become involved in their children’s
learning through a devotional that is included in the children’s take-home materials.
The church utilizes an in-house training program called Tate Springs
University that provides a course that emphasizes some area of parenting in the fall or
spring. In addition to these programs, Tate Springs also offers Vacation Bible School and
camp in which parents are encouraged to come and serve as their children participate.
Tate Springs has made changes in the scheduling of activities to ensure that all
programming, such as AWANA, choir practice, adult Bible studies, Financial Peace
University, begin and end at the same time. This is an intentional action on the part of the
staff to express its value of the family. The ministries of Tate Springs Baptist Church
serve 203 families that have at least one child between kindergarten and fourth grade.
These families will be offered the opportunity to participate in the ministry research, as
well as the teachers involved in the weekday educational program.
6
Community Culture
For the past thirty years, the community that makes up the ministry setting for
this writer has grown from being the outskirts of town to a well-established and thriving
area of Arlington. The city has grown 8.5 percent over the past ten years.9 The most
significant growth occurred between 1970 and 1980, with 53 percent of the homes in the
city being built during this time period.10
In this writer’s observation, the community
rallies around the local high school, making this region of the city a destination location
for those seeking residence in Arlington. The average age in the immediate community is
33.8, with 28 percent of the population holding at least a bachelor’s degree.11
In the
writer’s ministry setting, over 66 percent of the population works in white-collar
occupations, while the remainder works in blue-collar fields.12
Tate Springs Baptist Church’s membership demographics mirror much of what
the community’s demographical data reports. Additionally, demographics of the ministry
setting area demonstrate that almost 40 percent of the population describe themselves as
being strongly involved in their faith, while nearly 32 percent claim to be somewhat
involved.13
Participants in the ministry setting seem to mirror the community’s overall
openness to the prospects of becoming involved in their faith. The parents involved in the
ministries of Tate Springs Baptist Church may be more inclined to see spiritual growth in
9Percept Group, Inc., “Ministry Area Profile 2015 Trends,” 1990-2010, 4.
10
Percept Group, “Ministry Area Profile Census 2000,” 11.
11
Ibid., 8.
12
Ibid.
13
Percept Group, Inc., “Ministry Area Profile Ethos,” 1990-2010, 15.
7
their children, even though they may not be actively involved with their child’s spiritual
education. This assumption is made because of the many parents involved in the weekday
education program, but who do not belong to a local church.
The culture of the community in this writer’s ministry setting is that of concern
for their children’s education.14
Parents appear to be concerned with their child’s ability
to receive a good education; thus showing that there is a realization for the need of
education. The need for a good education is within the awareness of the parents in the
community and ministry setting. Therefore, one may infer that the need for a good
education could also include a desire for spiritual education as well.
Need Validation
Research has reported that 60 percent of this writer’s ministry setting describes
themselves as either somewhat or not at all involved in their faith.15
The need for
parental-led spiritual education is evident in any culture according to Scripture.16
An
examination of culture shows the importance that parents become active in their role as
spiritual educators.17
Unfortunately, the role of spiritual educator appears to have been
abdicated by many parents.18
This abandonment of the spiritual education on the part of
14Ibid., 16.
15
Ibid.
16
Deut. 6:4-9.
17
Benson, Peter L., and Carolyn H. Eklin. Effective Christian Education: A
National Study of Protestant Congregations—A Summary Report on Faith, Loyalty, and
Congregational Life. (Minneapolis: Search Institute, 1990), 42.
18
Voddie Baucham, Family Driven Faith (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books,
2007), 11.
8
not just parents, but Christian parents, has made itself evident in the life of this writer. In
the writer’s current ministry setting, there is an elementary school student who is being
raised by both biological parents who have each trusted Christ as their personal Lord and
Savior. This child should have the greatest benefit a child could hope for in terms of
receiving the message of Christ clearly; however, when confronted with the Gospel
message, the student was amazed, because she had always believed that the “Jesus thing
was just a myth.” When the writer queried the parents, both admitted that the child should
know more, but they just did not know how to share the biblical truths.
The words of the student moved this writer from an acknowledgement of need
in this area of biblical training to a heartfelt Kingdom commitment to serve through the
development of parental discipleship. One might think that this is an anomaly. After all,
surely a child of two believers not knowing that Jesus Christ was God-incarnate come to
provide the answer to man’s sin problem is not the norm. As research points out, this
writer’s experience is all too common. In a 2001 report to the Southern Baptist
Convention Executive Committee, an alarming statistic surfaced, noting that 70 percent
of teenagers regularly involved in church youth groups were no longer attending church
within two years of completing high school.19
One might argue that this figure must exclude those who have supportive
parents who encourage church attendance and regularly attend with their high school
student. However, a report from the 2002 Family Life Council stated that “88 percent of
19T. C. Pinkney, “Report to the Southern Baptist Convention Executive
Committee,” Nashville, Tennessee, September 18, 2001.
9
children raised in evangelical homes leave church at the age of 18, never to return.”20
This research indicates that just attending church does not guarantee that one’s child will
be spiritually competent.21
Later in the paper, it will be shown, using Scripture, why this
conclusion was proven millenniums ago; however, the answer to this problem is in the
fulfillment of the parental role of primary spiritual educator.
The problem is greater than one may think. George Barna uncovered that
approximately 40 percent of teenagers believed that Jesus made mistakes.22
One out of
three surveyed teenagers denies that God is omniscient, omnipotent, and omnipresent.23
In addition, 60 percent of teenagers surveyed claimed to not believe that Satan is real.24
The majority of teenagers could not name half of the Ten Commandments or supply the
name of the one who preached the Sermon on the Mount.25
The research provided by the
Barna group provides a dim picture for the upcoming generation of believers.
On July 3, 2011, a survey among the parents in the writer’s ministry setting
revealed that over 50 percent of the people surveyed did not feel adequate to teach their
children precepts from the Bible (see Appendix 1). The majority of the parents surveyed
20Jon Walker, “Family Life Council Says it’s Time to Bring Family Back to
Life,” St. Louis, Missouri (2002) [online]; accessed 1 June 2011; available from http://
www. sbcannualmeeting.net /sbc02/newsroom/newspage.asp?ID=261; Internet.
21
Ibid.
22
George Barna, Absolute Confusion (Ventura, CA: Regal Books, 1993), 139.
23
Ibid.
24
Ibid.
25
Ibid.
10
agreed that teaching their children principles for daily living is not the church’s
responsibility. However, the majority of the parents did not feel confident or comfortable
teaching their children the Word of God. According to the survey completed, the majority
of people in the ministry setting believe they have an obligation to teach above and
beyond the church’s educational offering; however, many struggle with feelings of
inadequacy. The greatest need discovered in this survey was the fact that over 70 percent
of the parents did not have a plan or strategy in place to teach their children the precepts
of God’s Word.
Bauchman contends that the solution to this problem is in the decision that
parents make to be active in the lives of their children.26
In some instances, parents will
have to spend more time with their children so that the opportunity for spiritual education
will occur. This task will be difficult for many parents as they juggle busy schedules and
overbook their children with extracurricular activities. Many will argue that parents need
only to schedule quality time with their children, and once that time is completed, the
parents are free to resume their schedule of tasks. However, it is “often during quantity
time that quality time emerges.”27
Parents cannot schedule quality time like one
schedules a doctor’s appointment. This writer’s personal experience as a parent and child
can affirm that it was in the most uneventful moments of life, such as sitting on a back
porch or wrestling around on the floor, that the most meaningful moments arose.
26Baucham, Family Driven Faith, 2007.
27
Ben Freudenburg, The Family Friendly Church (Loveland, CO: Group
Publishing, 1998), 37.
11
Freudenburg champions the usage of quantity time in hopes of discovering as much
quality time as possible.28
Purpose Statement
Research has shown that, regardless of the home, a tremendous need exists for
parents to be the primary spiritual educator.29
The purpose of this dissertation is to
investigate the importance of the parental role in the spiritual education of school-aged
children. This writer’s belief is that an intentional period should be incorporated where
basic Bible doctrine is taught to parents so that a scriptural foundation may be laid. Along
with the parents’ scriptural foundation, a method for fostering spiritual conversations
between parents and school-aged children is necessary to produce children who are
scripturally literate. An emphasis on a method for fostering spiritual conversations with
the children will be developed so that biblical truths may be disseminated in both formal
and informal settings. The hope is that this investigation will cause the ministry setting
examined to be strengthened, as well as an increased number of children that accept
Christ as Lord and Savior. The belief is that these objectives will benefit the ministry
setting.
Candidate Information
I have been married to Jennifer since October 2001. The Lord has blessed us
with two children—a son, Drew, born in June 2003, and a daughter, Madison, born in
May 2005. Parenting has been one of the greatest blessings one could hope to have.
28Ibid.
29
Ibid.
12
Throughout Scripture, God the Father gives mankind the perfect example of what a father
should be. I have gained a greater understanding of God and His attributes through the
struggle of being a parent. I am thankful for the opportunity to be a parent and recognize
the blessing God has allowed.
God calls people into different directions; each person has a unique plan that
they have been gifted to fulfill. Along the path that God has for everyone, some have
easier opportunities to learn more about God. The greatest benefit for Brady Blevins is
that he has been blessed to earn a bachelor’s degree in Bible and pastoral ministries from
a Bible college, a master’s degree in counseling from a Baptist university, and now stands
at the precipice of completing a doctorate from an evangelical theological seminary. The
plan that God developed allowed for an excellent knowledge of the Bible and proper
preparation to spread the Word of God to others with competence. God’s plan for Blevins
has equipped him for a more-than-adequate knowledge of Scripture; thus, the activity of
being the primary spiritual educator of his children did not, and does not, seem like a
daunting task. However, God did not call this writer exclusively to be a teacher, preacher,
or professor of the Bible; rather, the role of father has been added to the mix, and for a
little boy named Drew, and a little girl named Madison, this role is vital.
The role of a parent is difficult, because every child is different, and parents
must sift their way through the thousands of books and seminars to identify true
knowledge and direction. God has provided the answer and guidance for parents in His
Word. The problem that arises is that the path chosen for this writer is not the path the
majority of people are led down. Parents often feel at a loss when it comes to spiritual
education, because they lack knowledge of Scripture and even proper Bible study
13
methods. Speaking with a number of people in the ministry setting revealed this thought
of despair. Many parents have a sincere desire to be a source of knowledge to their
children about spiritual truths, while lacking the knowledge to be comfortable being the
spiritual educator God desires them to be. This writer empathized with the parents in the
ministry setting, realizing what it would be like if God had not allowed him to experience
the extrabiblical instruction. This writer could have experienced numerous other
blessings and a great life to be led as a child of God, but a biblical knowledge is
necessary if one desires to be the spiritual educator to his children.
As this writer considered the many parents that have passed through his
ministry and the heartfelt concerns of the parents, the implications were sobering. Many
children have not received the spiritual education they should have. This conclusion was
heartbreaking when the realization dawned that many believers possess a sincere desire to
know more about the Bible, but have not had an opportunity to learn, in-depth or at all,
the various truths about the Scripture, because God had a different path for them.
However, a way could and should be provided for people to learn more about God’s
Word and to gain a better understanding of the doctrines of the Bible. This is the
beginning of the realization that something must be done to assist parents in their role as
the primary spiritual educators of their children. The problem is not with the parents’ lack
of ability or even desire; instead, a clear and concise methodology of being the parent
God desires for them to be must be established in an understandable format.
While it would require volumes to detail every little event that God used to
make this idea and then turn it to reality, God used one event in the life of this writer to
show him just what was desired. The writer’s son had just begun his final season of flag
football, and the little boy had a desire to play the running-back position. After careful
14
study of the playbook and a quizzing of it by his father, the little boy struggled with recall
and comprehension of the plays. With little time on hand to learn, a lot about the essence
of education as spelled out in Scripture came to mind.
Drew did not need just head knowledge of the names of the plays and a vague
understanding that the goal was to score a touchdown. He needed to receive the play with
a clear knowledge of the integral parts; basically, it needed to mean something to him. As
the writer struggled to help his son, God’s instruction to the Hebrew parents as they
journeyed from Egypt to the Promised Land rang true. The plays had to be modeled. For
the boy to just see it on paper was insufficient. He believed the plays would work, and he
had a strong desire to be obedient to the teachings of the playbook, but that did not help
him in practical terms of learning the plays. He could have all the desire in the world, but
without someone teaching him, he would never know.
After a few minutes of study, this writer comprehended the play and quickly
transformed the living room into an offensive backfield. Taking each play one step at a
time, the writer modeled to his son how the play was to be run, paying special attention to
the parts that were pertinent to the running-back position. With the play modeled, it was
time for the boy to try it out on his own, and before long, the boy mastered the plays as he
had modeled his father’s footsteps which he had observed from just a short distance.
To remember that children are watching every step their parents make is
imperative. In his letter to the Philippians, the apostle Paul used this activity of learning.
Finally, brethren, whatever things are true, whatever things are noble, whatever
things are just, whatever things are pure, whatever things are lovely, whatever
things are of good report, if there is any virtue and if there is anything
praiseworthy—meditate on these things. The things which you learned and received
and heard and saw in me, these do, and the God of peace will be with you (Phil.
4:8-9).
15
Paul uses two sets of words in this passage to show the activity of learning and
demonstrating knowledge. First, he uses the words “learned and received,” which give
the connotation that one must learn the information possessing the head knowledge.30
However, just knowing the information is not enough—one must receive the information
that is to take it to heart.31
The individual must take the teaching to heart and, thus,
willfully choose to change something in his or her life to make the teaching evident.32
“In Paul’s ministry, he not only taught the Word but also lived it so that his
listeners could see the truth in his life.”33
Additionally, Scripture mentioned that it was
not just the things that were learned and received, but those things that were seen and
heard. Seeing and hearing is the action of a spectator, observing the action, or—in this
case, the child watching the parent. Paul embodied this, and lived a life worthy of being
emulated by others. James echoes a similar sentiment when he wrote, “But be doers of
the word, and not hearers only” (James 1:22).
As this writer rehearsed every play in the playbook for his son, the little boy
quietly fulfilled the biblical principles of Philippians 4:8-9 as he learned and received the
plays, and then put it into action by hearing and seeing what was modeled for him. The
Word of God is powerful, and it should come as no surprise when the teachings of
Scripture continue to be found true. What this writer learned as he observed his son
30W. W. Wiersbe, Philippians, Bible Exposition Commentary (Wheaton, IL:
Victor Books, 1996), 96.
31
Ibid.
32
Ibid.
33
Ibid.
16
learning football plays is this: the children are watching just as God said they would. The
parents’ ability to model godly principles to their children will greatly impact the
likelihood that the children will come to them with spiritual questions. Research has
shown that the parents are the most influential persons in the lives of their children.34
Having observed this process, the necessity for an intentional teaching time to equip
parents in the doctrines of the Bible and demonstrate a model that parents can utilize to
be active in their child’s spiritual development is paramount.
One, if not the greatest, benefit for the writer was his own childhood. His
parents are both Christians who love and serve God. The example provided by his parents
served as a solid foundation for godly living. Over his lifetime, the writer observed his
homemaker mother and his father, who was an aerospace engineer, faithfully attending
church. The Blevins family was at church every Sunday morning, Sunday night, and
Wednesday night. If a visitation meeting was scheduled, the family was present ready to
serve. The writer and his siblings were expected to take part in the ministries of the
church, including programs such as AWANA. The result has yielded much fruit. Each of
the Blevins children hold bachelor’s degree from a Bible college, and all are involved in
church. The writer’s parents were not perfect, but they modeled the principles of God’s
Word in their daily lives. The writer believes that a means to strengthen today’s church is
for parents to live the teachings of God’s Word and to be intentional in teaching the Bible
to their children.
34Mark Holmen, Building Faith at Home (Ventura, CA: Regal Books,
2007), 26.
17
CHAPTER 2
PERSPECTIVES
Introduction
The writer’s ministry project intends to provide research that will lead to the
development of parents as the primary spiritual educators of their children. Therefore, it
will demonstrate through scriptural references and historical evidence the mandate given
to parents to fulfill their biblical responsibility as educators. The following evidence will
prove the necessity of the parental role and exhibit some of the biblical models to the
spreading of biblical truths.
Biblical Evidence
The Bible is the guidebook for life and is the authority of the Christian’s life.1
Therefore, an investigation of the Scriptures is necessary to reveal God’s intent and
purpose for parents. Scripture must be studied so that the role of the parent is defined and
the methodology of delivering these truths may be examined and practiced. While a
multitude of passages could be examined, special attention will be given to a number of
integral passages in the Old Testament, as well as the New Testament, to illustrate the
importance God placed on the role of the parents.
12 Tim 3:16-17.
18
Deuteronomy 6:4-9. Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God, the LORD is one! 5You
shall love the LORD your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all
your strength. 6And these words which I command you today shall be in your heart.
7You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you
sit in your house, when you walk by the way, when you lie down, and when you
rise up. 8You shall bind them as a sign on your hand, and they shall be as frontlets
between your eyes. 9You shall write them on the doorposts of your house and on
your gates.
Understanding God’s plan for the role of parents as spiritual educators is vital
to the argument presented. The primary passage for this argument is found in the book of
Deuteronomy. Deuteronomy is written in a pattern—a Hittite-type of suzerainty treaty.2
This type of literary structure allows the reader “to see Deuteronomy as a national
constitution: a binding agreement made between God as the nation’s ruler, and Israel as
His people.”3 Therefore, the words written throughout this book are understood by the
reader as clear directives from God to His people. The children of Israel did not consider
these words a mere suggestion made by God, but rather, as a command for living and a
reminder of past, present, and future blessings.
Deuteronomy 6:4-9 is the central passage of study as it outlines God’s
command for obedience to Him and the vital role that parents are to play in expressing
the importance of knowing and teaching the truths of the Scripture to their children. This
passage of Scripture is commonly referred to as the “Shema.”4 When referencing the
“Shema,” one is commonly referring to a liturgical prayer uttered by males twice a day as
2Lawrence O. Richards, The Bible Readers Companion, electronic ed.,
(Wheaton, IL: Victor Books, 1991), 116.
3Ibid.
4J. F. Walvoord, R. B. Zuck, and Dallas Theological Seminary. The Bible
Knowledge Commentary: An Exposition of the Scriptures (Wheaton, IL: Victor Books,
1983), 274.
19
a statement of their faith.5 In verse four, the first word of the command is to “shema”; this
is the Hebrew word that is translated “to hear.”6 This word is in the imperative mood to
emphasize that the people were given a command to hear this message. “‘To hear,’ in
Hebrew lexicography, is tantamount to ‘to obey,’ especially in covenant contexts such as
this.”7 Thus, “to hear God without putting into effect the command is not to hear him at
all.”8
Therefore, one must realize that this is not simply a command to some general
desire for auditory obedience, but rather a directive to live life by God’s standard. The
singular form of the verb “to hear” emphasizes the collective nature of the message to the
entire nation.9 Therefore, what was about to come was the command of God that was
applicable to every person in the nation. The message that follows is the basic statement
of faith for the Hebrew people.10
5Walter A. Elwell and Philip Wesley Comfort, eds., “Shema,” in Tyndale
Bible Dictionary (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, 2001), 1190.
6Francis Brown, Samuel Rolles Driver, and Charles Augustus Briggs,
Enhanced Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew and English Lexicon, electronic ed. (Oak
Harbor, WA: Logos Research Systems, 2000), 1033.
7Eugene H. Merrill, Deuteronomy, New American Commentary, vol. 4,
electronic ed., Logos Library System (Nashville: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 2001),
162.
8Ibid.
9Ibid.
10
Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset, et al., A Commentary, Critical and
Explanatory, on the Old and New Testaments (Oak Harbor, WA: Logos Research
Systems, 1997), Deut 6:1.
20
The Hebrew people’s statement of faith reads: “The LORD our God, the LORD
is one!”11
In a land of polytheism, the children of Israel had this statement of faith that
they worshipped one singular God. However, this was not just a statement that they were
monotheistic people. Instead, the foundation of the Jewish religion is established in the
acknowledgment that one singular God is to be worshipped by all.12
The children of Israel were to demonstrate a specific attitude toward God. The
command to love God was a choice that the Israelites had to make, and in making this
choice, they were entering into an intimate relationship with Him.13
Loving God meant
that their love was demonstrated in their obedience to the commands of God.14
The
Israelites were to love God with all their heart, which is the seat of the emotions; with all
their soul, which is the center of the personality in man; and with all their strength, which
is body and soul.15
“Loving the Lord with all the heart and soul and strength is placed at
the head, as the spiritual principle from which the observance of the commandments was
to flow.”16
The Israelites entered into the covenant relationship with God and as a nation;
they made the choice to serve the one and only God. If one wondered about the
11Ibid., Deut 6:4.
12
H. D. M. Spence-Jones, ed., Deuteronomy, Pulpit Commentary (Bellingham,
WA: Logos Research Systems, 2004), 118.
13
Walvoord, et al., Bible Knowledge Commentary, 274.
14
Ibid.
15
Carl Friedrich Keil and Franz Delitzsch, “Deut 6:5,” in Commentary on the
Old Testament, Deut 6:5 (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 2002), 885.
16
Ibid.
21
importance of verse five, it only takes an examination in the life and ministry of Jesus to
see just how crucial this particular verse is. In Matthew 22:34-40, “when a scribe asked
Jesus what he considered the essence of the law, he quoted (Deuteronomy) 6:5.”17
This
verse was the bottom line for Israelites, just as it is for contemporary Christians.18
Understanding the sober nature in which this relationship between God and His people is
founded explains the importance of the following verses and the necessity to which the
commands be followed.
In the sixth verse of Deuteronomy 6, the attention turns from just speaking the
truths of verse five, but also committing them to memory. God requests that His people
place this truth in their hearts, the person’s emotional seat.19
The cornerstone of the
Jewish faith was to be at the heart of every person, and this truth of the single God was to
be at the very forefront of their mind. Verses four through six are crucial in understanding
the serious nature of God’s command to His people, and the way that God’s people were
to act and react to the directive personally. However, it was never God’s intent just for all
the people existing during that particular moment of human history to know and live this
command. Instead, God desired this truth to continue into perpetuity, and the only way
this could occur was if someone would share the truth to the next generation.20
17
H. L. Willmington, Willmington's Bible Handbook (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale
House Publishers, 1997), 95.
18
Ibid.
19
Walvoord, et al., Bible Knowledge Commentary, 274. 20
Ibid.
22
The emphasis changes in verse seven; instead of speaking to the entire nation,
the message shifts to the adults in the congregation and a specific action they are to
assume. Verse number seven acts as a commissioning of parents to be the persons who
would disseminate these truths to the next generation. This verse adds extra emphasis to
the command that was already well understood by the Israelites. Knowing God’s
command and reciting a prayer were certainly not enough. This message that God is
singular and the command to live for the one, true God was not a novel suggestion; again,
God points the reader to hide the words of Scripture in one’s heart, but increases the
intensity by including the activity of teaching one’s children. These truths were to be
taught to the children, and it was the parent who was selected by God to fulfill this task.21
“The Bible teaches that both mothers and fathers are to exercise leadership in the nurture,
training, discipline, and teaching of their children.”22
“Parents have a spiritual obligation to share their faith with their children by
precept and practice.”23
Considered by many to be the father of family ministry, Charles
Sell says that the activity of teaching was to be performed through both formal and
informal educational activity.24
Parents should teach their children “not only in formal
ways, but also in informal ways: when they are lying down, standing up, walking by the
21Ibid.
22
John Piper and Wayne Grudem, Recovering Biblical Manhood and
Womanhood (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, 2006), 412.
23
Franklin H. Paschall and Herschel H. Hobbs, The Teacher's Bible
Commentary: A Concise, Thorough Interpretation of the Entire Bible Designed
Especially for Sunday School Teachers (Nashville: Broadman and Holman Publishers,
1972), 118.
24
Charles M. Sell, Family Ministry (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1996), 292-94.
23
way; in short, in all of life’s circumstances.”25
The intent of verse seven is to emphasize
the primary nature of an informal approach to teaching children the spiritual truths. God
uses repetition later on in the book of Deuteronomy in order to expound further on the
necessity of this informal style of education.
Deuteronomy 11:18-21. Therefore you shall lay up these words of mine in your
heart and in your soul, and bind them as a sign on your hand, and they shall be as
frontlets between your eyes. 19
You shall teach them to your children, speaking of
them when you sit in your house, when you walk by the way, when you lie down,
and when you rise up. 20
And you shall write them on the doorposts of your house
and on your gates, 21
that your days and the days of your children may be multiplied
in the land of which the LORD swore to your fathers to give them, like the days of
the heavens above the earth.
“Parents should be alerted to the fact that the best approach to aiding their
child’s faith development is not formal, but informal, instruction.”26
According to this
passage of Scripture, education of children must come from the milieu and should be led
by the father.27
“Clearly, God intends fathers to have a unique role in the home.”28
Fathers, as the leaders of the home, should lead the way in this area of spiritual
education.29
The father’s role in leading the charge is emphasized in other passages; “For
He established a testimony in Jacob, And appointed a law in Israel, Which He
commanded our fathers, That they should make them known to their children” (Ps 78:5).
25Jay E. Adams, Christian Living in the Home (Phillipsburg, NJ: Presbyterian
and Reformed Publishing Co., 1972), 105.
26
Sell, Family Ministry, 288.
27
Adams, Christian Living in the Home, 105.
28
David Allen Black, Myth of Adolescence: Raising Responsible Children in an
Irresponsible Society (Yorba Linda, CA: Davidson Press, 1999), 54.
29
Adams, Christian Living in the Home, 105.
24
God clearly commands the parents to be the spiritual educators, and fathers specifically
should lead the way.
While verse seven emphasized the location and even the formality of the
parental education, the next verse points to some specific activities that should be
exercised in one way or another. In verse 8, God sets forth the directive: “You shall bind
them as a sign on your hand, and they shall be as frontlets between your eyes” (Deut 6:8).
The question exists amongst scholars on whether this verse was meant to be taken
literally or figuratively.30
The Israelites took the passage literally as the men would wear
phylacteries (frontlets in the text).31
Phylacteries were “small leather containers enclosing
parchment with a number of Biblical verses upon it.”32
Additionally, phylacteries are
referred to as “tefillin”; the leather containers had straps that a man would tie around the
front of his head so that the pouch rested on his forehead, between his eyes.33
The pouch
contained a couple of passages of Scripture—Exodus 13:1-10, 11-16; Deuteronomy 6:4-
9, 11:13-2—to be worn on the forehead.34
In addition to wearing the Scriptures on their person, they were to “write them
on the doorposts of your house and on your gates” (Deut 6:9). “Orthodox Jewish homes
have a mezuzah, a small box attached to the doorposts which contains various Scripture
30James E. Smith, The Pentateuch, 2
nd ed. (Joplin, MO: College Press Pub. Co.,
1993), Deut. 6:1-25.
31
Ibid.
32
Ibid.
33
Allen C. Myers, Eerdmans Bible Dictionary (Grand Rapids: William B.
Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1987), 832.
34
Ibid.
25
quotations.”35
The reason why God established these principles was because He knew
that the biggest challenge the Israelites faced as they entered the Promised Land was
forgetting their divine benefactor.36
The history of the children of Israel is well
documented throughout the pages of the Old Testament, and it appears that God’s
directives were well noted as the nation consistently throughout the years strayed in and
out of obedience. Israel’s redemptive factor in the Old Testament is that they would
eventually remember those things they had been taught, which was to repent and
eventually return to God. God’s plan for parents has not changed since the words in
Deuteronomy were penned. This portion of Scripture illuminates the unchanging
instruction from God. Of additional note is the second time the command was repeated in
Deuteronomy. The repetition shows the reader that this is an important truth to God and
His desire for the reader to know and practice the truth. An examination of additional
passages will show that God’s plan for the parent is unchanging.
Deuteronomy 4:9-10 states; “Only take heed to yourself, and diligently keep
yourself, lest you forget the things your eyes have seen, and lest they depart from your
heart all the days of your life. And teach them to your children and your grandchildren”
(4:9). Moses tells Israel that the strength of the nation is in the law that God has given
them.37
However, this strength could be easily lost the moment the people forgot about
35
Smith, Pentateuch, Deut 6:1-25.
36
Ibid.
37
Andrew Knowles, The Bible Guide, 1st ed. (Minneapolis: Augsburg,
2001), 95.
26
the law of God.38
The only way that Israel could prevent from losing their greatest
strength is by teaching their children the statutes of God’s Word. Moses points out that
the most important event they should remember is their time standing at the base of the
mountain receiving God’s statutes and knowing the direction God desired the nation to
go. Moses knew “when God’s Word becomes commonplace to the children of God in
any time, and they no longer respect it, then they are heading for serious trouble.”39
The
problem that Israel faced was idolatry, and they were subject to fall into this lifestyle in
two different ways: they could forget about the great deeds of deliverance performed by
God, or through apathy and laziness they could fail to teach their children.40
Either action
could cause the Israelites to fall to the brink of annihilation; this was of the utmost
concern to Moses.41
Verse ten contains the specifics regarding what Moses desired for the
Israelites—what they were to teach their children. Moses wanted the parents to teach
their children about the various truths of God, but told them to remember one certain
event—“especially concerning the day you stood before the LORD your God in Horeb,
when the LORD said to me, ‘Gather the people to Me, and I will let them hear My words,
that they may learn to fear Me all the days they live on the earth, and that they may teach
their children’” (Deut 4:10). This event was not only the strength of the Israelites, but
38D. A. Carson, New Bible Commentary: 21st Century Edition, 4
th ed.
(Leicester, England: Inter-Varsity Press, 1994), Deut 4:9-14.
39
Warren W. Wiersbe, Wiersbe’s Expository Outlines on the Old Testament
(Wheaton, IL: Victor Books, 1993), Deut 4-5.
40
Walvoord, et al., Bible Knowledge Commentary, 269.
41
Ibid.
27
was the motivation behind living a life of obedience to God. In addition to the motivation
for godly living, remembering that day in Horeb was the fundamental principle that
would lead them to God’s blessings. To say that it was imperative that the parents teach
their children the spiritual truths is an understatement; not only did the nation’s prosperity
depend on it, but the very existence of the nation was at stake.
Understanding the grave significance of this passage may be difficult for
contemporary readers unable to attend the events that took place in Horeb. However, “the
experience at Horeb was designed to produce a fear of God in the hearts of the people so
that a covenant between them and the LORD could be possible.”42
This event was
supernatural and awe-inspiring to a nation that needed to have an indelible mark
engraved in its memory. This fear was intended to move in such a way that the people
would never forget and, as a result, would pass the fear down to their children and to
subsequent generations. “In the Old Testament the fear of God is more than awe or
reverence though it includes both. Fearing God is becoming so acutely aware of His
moral purity and omnipotence that one is genuinely afraid to disobey Him.”43
With this understanding of what it means to fear God, one must consider this
within the context of what is being stated. God desired the parents to remember this event
that struck such fear, awe, and reverence in their hearts that they would never forget it
and, in turn, teach their children and grandchildren. Thus, the parents were doing more
than teaching their children some principles on a page; instead, they were teaching them a
godly way of living that was centered on the purity, majesty, and awesome nature of the
42Ibid.
43
Ibid.
28
one and only almighty God. Therefore, the importance of teaching children supersedes
any other activity for the parent in relation to their child as it pertains to equipping the
child for life inside and outside the care of his or her parents.
Proverbs 22:6 states; “Train up a child in the way he should go, And when he
is old he will not depart from it.” For many parents, this is a guarantee that if they take
their children to church and Sunday school—that no matter what else happens, no matter
how far their child strays, the child will eventually will return to the faith.44
However, no
guarantees exist in parenting; each child will ultimately have to make the choice to do
what is right or what is wrong.45
One must understand that many of the proverbs are
truisms or maxims that are designed to demonstrate the likely outcome of what will occur
if the principle is followed.46
“Proverbs 22:6 is an exhortation encouraging the
importance of parental instruction.”47
Parents do have the ability to put their children in
the best possible situation to pass life’s tests and answer God’s call. A literal translation
of Proverbs 22:6 reads: “Give instruction to a youth about his way, Even when he is old
he turneth not from it.”48
In the literal interpretation, one see’s that the instruction must
44
John Caldwell, Raising G Rated Kids in an R Rated World (Enumclaw, WA:
Pleasant Word Publishing, 2007), 13.
45
Ibid., 14.
46
Paul J. Achtemeier, Harper’s Bible Dictionary, 1st ed. (San Francisco: Harper
& Row, 1985), 831.
47
Merrill C. Tenney, Zondervan’s Pictorial Bible Dictionary (Grand Rapids:
Zondervan Publishing House, 1967), 759.
48
Robert Young, Young’s Literal Translation (Oak Harbor: Logos Research
Systems, 1997), Prov 22:6.
29
be given and teaching must occur and, as a result, the child—even when he is old—will
be more inclined to turn back to that which he was taught.49
The word translated “train up” in the passage can be understood as to dedicate
or make narrow.50
Education of the child will help narrow the child’s path. The hope is
that the narrow path will lead to fewer opportunities to wander off the best path God has
for that individual. Again, the child has to make the decision throughout his or her life to
continually choose to do the things he or she has been taught through the years. This is
where the importance of modeling from the Deuteronomy passages exhibits its greatest
strength. If the child has not received the education God intended them to receive through
their parents, then the path they are on is wider and more likely to face opposition to
God’s will. Consider the words of Christ: “Enter by the narrow gate; for wide is the gate
and broad is the way that leads to destruction, and there are many who go in by it.
Because narrow is the gate and difficult is the way which leads to life, and there are few
who find it” (Matt 7:13-14).
Another contemporary translation rendered the passage: “Teach your children
to choose the right path, and when they are older, they will remain upon it” (Prov 22:6,
New Living Translation (NLT)). The implications of this passage mirror that of
Deuteronomy 6:4-9. Additionally, the Hebrew word that is translated “train up” or
“teach” can be translated “dedicate.”51
This helps to understand that God’s desire was and
49Caldwell, Raising G Rated Kids, 14.
50
Wilhelm Gesenius and Samuel Prideaux Tregelles, Gesenius’ Hebrew and
Chaldee Lexicon to the Old Testament Scriptures (Bellingham, WA: Logos Research
Systems, 2003), 292.
51
Brown, et al., Enhanced Brown-Driver-Briggs, 335.
30
is for parents to dedicate their children to a specific path of life, this path being that of
obedience to God.52
Other interpretations of this passage include: “‘Dedicate the child to
God,’ ‘Prepare the child for his future responsibilities,’ ‘Exercise or train the child for
adulthood’.”53
All the interpretations ultimately lead the reader to the same conclusion—
that the parent must be active in the spiritual education of their children for the best
possible results to occur. Although no guarantees exist, parents certainly should have a
proper understanding of what their responsibility is with regard to their children’s biblical
knowledge and daily living.
Psalm 78:1-4. Give ear, O my people, to my law; Incline your ears to the words of
my mouth. I will open my mouth in a parable; I will utter dark sayings of old,
Which we have heard and known, And our fathers have told us. We will not hide
them from their children, Telling to the generation to come the praises of the LORD,
And His strength and His wonderful works that He has done.
“This long ‘historical psalm’ is essentially a retelling of Israel’s record of
disobedience and unbelief in the face of all that God had done for His people.”54
Psalm
78 begins with eight verses that show the necessity of following the command of God to
educating children on spiritual principles, but it also shows the consequences that will
inevitably occur when the action is forsaken. Asaph, the author of this Psalm, begins by
52
Walvoord, et al., Bible Knowledge Commentary, 953.
53
Gleason L. Archer, Encyclopedia of Bible Difficulties (Grand Rapids:
Zondervan Publishing House, 1982), 252.
54
Ted Cabal, Chad Owen Brand, E. Ray Clendenen, et al., The Apologetics
Study Bible: Real Questions, Straight Answers, Stronger Faith (Nashville: Holman Bible
Publishers, 2007), 855.
31
demanding an attentive ear from the nation as he begins to speak in parables and utter the
“dark sayings” or riddles that needed an accompaniment of explanation.55
The first four verses begin with a stern reminder that their fathers had been
faithful to show them the spiritual truths of God; he continues to say that they will not be
the ones to hide the truth from their children. “Asaph pinpoints what each generation
needs to pass on to the next: ‘the praiseworthy deeds of the Lord’.”56
Thus, in the first four verses of this chapter Asaph reveals that the passing of
spiritual truths needs to occur. A sense of responsibility and even national pride was
involved for the parents to share with their children the great things God had done. Often,
Israel was a rebellious nation and what they and the generations to follow needed was the
reminder of what God had done for them.
Psalm78:5-8. For He established a testimony in Jacob, And appointed a law in
Israel, Which He commanded our fathers, That they should make them known to
their children; That the generation to come might know them, The children who
would be born, That they may arise and declare them to their children, That they
may set their hope in God, And not forget the works of God, But keep His
commandments; And may not be like their fathers, A stubborn and rebellious
generation, A generation that did not set its heart aright, And whose spirit was not
faithful to God.
Asaph paints a slightly different picture as the intensity of this passage
increases greatly. The first four verses of this chapter pointed out the activity of being the
spiritual educators of children, pointing the reader back to the deeds of the Lord.57
Parents were reminded of the message to pass down, but Asaph’s words are about to be
55Jamieson, et al., Commentary, Critical and Explanatory, Ps 78:1-3.
56
Richards, Bible Readers Companion, 368.
57
Walvoord, et al., Bible Knowledge Commentary, 851.
32
more dramatic for the reader. In verse five, Asaph transitions to focusing on the words of
the Lord. “The ‘testimony’ and the ‘law’ are the whole series of commands given by God
to his people, beginning with the directions concerning circumcision in Genesis (17:10-
14), and ending with the last precept in Deuteronomy (32:46).”58
Israel received clear direction from God as to how they should live; the
guidelines had been established, thus leaving no excuse for the rebellious nature of the
people. The creation of the law allowed the Israelites to know what they needed to do, but
they had obviously neglected one other commandment from God, and that was to take the
law and pass it down to the other generations. These words were a reference back to
Deuteronomy 4:9, 6:7, and 11:19. This command for parental spiritual education was
essential so that the generations would know the words and deeds of the Lord.59
The idea
in this text is for each generation to be just as active as the previous so that a perpetual
continuation of scripturally grounded people would always be present. The hope is that
the rebellion would stop and God could begin blessing His people as in times past, rather
than being in a constant state of rebuke and correction to a disobedient nation.
The grim reality of what is to come is pointed out in the final verses of this
portion of Scripture. Asaph points ahead to the future by bringing up the past and current
situations in which Israel has had involvement. The concern presented at the end of the
passage is that they would not turn out to be like their fathers who were described as
being stubborn and rebellious. A principle presented in this verse is an age-old truth in
58H. D. M. Spence-Jones, ed., Psalms, Pulpit Commentary (Bellingham, WA:
Logos Research Systems, 2004), 124.
59
Ibid., 124.
33
that the generation who fails to learn from their parents’ mistakes is destined and doomed
to repeat them. The goal of the writer here was to exhort these people to teach their
children so that the nation’s current state of rebellion would not become their permanent
state.60
Isaiah 38:19 states; “The living, the living man, he shall praise You, As I do
this day; The father shall make known Your truth to the children” (Isa 38:19). Hezekiah,
king of Judah (the southern kingdom) had an illness that, according to Isaiah 38:21, had
something to do with a boil, and Isaiah had told the king he would die. Hezekiah prayed
and asked God to extend his days, and God saw fit to do thus. As one would imagine,
Hezekiah was thankful for God’s intervention. With more time on earth, Hezekiah
records some of his new or renewed appreciations in life; which included service to
God.61
In Hezekiah’s praise to the Lord, he declares that the father should make
known to his children the truths of God. With his new-found look at life, Hezekiah
realizes that serving God begins by serving in the home, where parents familiarize
themselves with the teaching of the Scriptures in the lives of their children. Hezekiah’s
consideration of the end of his life allowed him truly to understand what the Scriptures
had already stated, a truth he had no doubt been taught as a child.
Ephesians 6:4. Children, obey your parents in the Lord, for this is right. “Honor
your father and mother,” which is the first commandment with promise: “that it
may be well with you and you may live long on the earth.” And you, fathers, do not
60Willmington, Willmington's Bible Handbook, 317.
61
Warren W. Wiersbe, Be Comforted, An Old Testament Study (Wheaton, IL:
Victor Books, 1996), 101.
34
provoke your children to wrath, but bring them up in the training and admonition of
the Lord.
In this letter to the church at Ephesus, the apostle Paul admonishes the children
to obey their parents. Paul writes that children should obey their parents because of their
own relationships with God, because it is the right thing to do, because it is commanded
by God, and because it will bring God’s blessings.62
With this quick word to the children,
he continues in the theme of the passage, submission to one another, and places the focus
on the father. In the Jewish household, the father was the head of the house and set the
example for the family.63
Therefore, Paul’s address to the father is most appropriate as he
would be the trend setter for the family. The father’s actions were very important as the
family would take their cues from him and he is told immediately not to provoke his
children.64
The word translated “provoke” in the passage can be understood as “make
angry,” an action the father would want to avoid so that he would not cause the child to
sin.65
The best interpretation seems to be “to rouse to wrath, to provoke, exasperate,
anger.”66
Fathers should not exasperate or excite their children to anger, although proper
62
Ibid., 101.
63
Allen C. Myers, The Eerdmans Bible Dictionary, (Grand Rapids, Mich.:
Eerdmans, 1987), 377-78.
64
Ibid., 378.
65
Johannes P. Louw and Eugene Albert Nida, Greek-English Lexicon of the
New Testament: Based on Semantic Domains, electronic ed. of the 2nd
ed. (New York:
United Bible Societies, 1996), 189.
66
Kenneth S. Wuest, Wuest’s Word Studies from the Greek New Testament:
For the English Reader (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1997), Eph
6:4.
35
discipline most likely will cause children to be upset. The father’s actions should not be
sufficient to cause the child to sin against God. This passage contains two other important
words.
The parent’s job, as described in this verse, was to “bring them up” in training
and admonition. In Greek this phrase, “bring them up,” is condensed to one word,
“ἐκτρεφω.” “The word is not confined to the nourishing of a child physically, but rather
includes its bringing up or rearing in the various departments of its life.”67
The word
“training” is used to identify what is needed from the father and mother. Training may
mean various things to many people, but the Greek word (παιδεια) translated in this
passage should be understood in a slightly different manner. Training infers “the whole
training and education of children which relates to the cultivation of mind and morals,
and employs for this purpose, now commands and admonitions, now reproof and
punishment.”68
Training actually covers general education as well as spiritual education.
The unique aspect of this verse over the parenting verses in the Old Testament is that this
passage speaks to the family about the need for parental training. This passage
specifically singles out the father to fulfill this role of teacher.
In verse four, Paul uses one more important word that deserves attention, and
that is the word “admonition.” This Greek word (νουθεσίᾳ) carries a connotation of
educating others through a positive word and consistent discipline through the necessary
means. Additionally, the word may carry the connotation of argument, reproof, and/or
67
Ibid.
68
Ibid.
36
blame.69
The combination of training (παιδεια) and admonition (νουθεσίᾳ) examines the
education of children as a whole. Areas such as morality, purpose, discipline, and
punishment are covered. The word translated for admonition (νουθεσίᾳ) has a distinctive
feature. “Its distinctive feature is training by word of mouth, as is shown by its classical
usage in connection with words meaning to exhort or teach.”70
The special relationship of
these two words is important. Strong notes that the word translated “admonition” can
mean to “put in mind,” by implication.71
Therefore, one realizes that parents are to teach
their children and ingrain the Lord in their minds. Teaching shapes and trains minds of
children so that they are able to make good decisions, heed warnings, and live a life that
pleases the Lord. Verse four gives parents the command to go and teach their children the
truths of God’s Word, unwavering in the area of discipline.72
2 Timothy 3:14-17. But you must continue in the things which you have learned
and been assured of, knowing from whom you have learned them, and that from
childhood you have known the Holy Scriptures, which are able to make you wise
for salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. All Scripture is given by
inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for
instruction in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, thoroughly
equipped for every good work.
This passage is vital to the argument contending for the importance of the
investigation of the importance of the parental role in the spiritual education of children.
69Ibid.
70
Marvin Richardson Vincent, Word Studies in the New Testament
(Bellingham, WA: Logos Research Systems, 2002), Eph 6:4.
71
James Strong, A Concise Dictionary of the Words in the Greek Testament and
The Hebrew Bible, 50, vol. 1 (Bellingham, WA: Logos Research Systems, 2009).
72
Kenneth S. Wuest, Wuest’s Word Studies from the Greek New Testament:
For the English Reader (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1997), Eph
6:4.
37
The first two verses of this portion of Scripture demonstrate that the biblical mandate on
parents to be the primary spiritual educators was still in effect during New Testament
days. Further, this passage serves as a reminder that all the Scripture is profitable for
doctrine, which is translated from the Greek word for “teaching.”73
The people were to be
taught for “instruction in righteousness,” and the word used for “instruction” is the same
Greek word (παιδεια) that was used in Ephesians 6:4 for “training.”74
Additionally, this
same word (παιδεια) can be translated literally as “child-training.”75
To place even
greater emphasis on the parental role, the Apostle Paul gave this instruction to a young
pastor named Timothy, who Paul revered as a son in the ministry.76
Historical Evidence
A review of the Scriptures proved that the idea of parental education,
specifically spiritual in nature, was a common theme throughout God’s Word. One must
consider what other literary works have stated concerning this topic that the Bible found
to be imperative. An examination of literature is of the utmost necessity for this
investigation to provide a complete review of the various perspectives as it relates to the
importance of the parental role in the spiritual education of elementary school-aged
children.
73
James Swanson, Dictionary of Biblical Languages with Semantic Domains:
Greek (New Testament), electronic ed. (Oak Harbor: Logos Research Systems, 1997),
1436. 74
Ibid., 4082.
75
Walvoord, et al., Bible Knowledge Commentary, 757.
76
1 Tim 1:2.
38
Review of Literature
An absence of literature speaking to the direct work of the importance of the
parental role in the spiritual education of the school-aged children is evident. A number
of works that examine the moral development of children and adolescents have been
published. In addition, the parents’ influence on their children has been studied and is
pertinent in understanding the important position parents have in the lives of their
children. This section will examine a number of views from secular psychologists and
their theories on the moral development of children as it pertains to the role of the
parents. Additionally, this section will explore Christian literature to examine what
contemporary writers propose concerning God’s view of the parents and children.
Value of Parental Monitoring
The moral and cognitive development of children is a subject area that is
examined with the hopes of understanding more about the development of the human
mind. The first aspect of understanding how children learn, and what they learn, is
discovered by examining the parent-child interaction. Theorists believe that, as the child
reaches school-age, a decreased need exists for building autonomy and establishing daily
routines.77
Instead, a greater emphasis is placed on work habits and achievement.78
The
development and overall academic success of the child depends on the ability of the
77M. E. Lamb, P. C. Hwang, R. D. Ketterlinus, and M. P. Fracasso, Parent-
child Relationships: Development in the Context of a Family (Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum,
1999), quoted in M. H. Bornstein and M. E Lamb, Developmental Psychology: An
Advanced Textbook, 4th
ed. (Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum, 1999), 26.
78
Ibid.
39
parents to monitor their children.79
Parents who take the time to monitor their children’s
behavior see the greater results academically; thus, parental contact plays a positive role
on the child’s success. An increase in parental contact seems to be helpful in areas of
education of children. The idea of parental monitoring and the positive effects that follow
seem to confirm the words in Deuteronomy.
Scaffolding Used as a Technique of Training
School-aged Children
Accompanying the idea of monitoring as an appropriate tool to enhance the
child’s ability to obtain an increased acuity in academics or other subjects, theorists
suggest that parents can also consider another method of assisting their children in
achieving the most success. One technique available to parents is called scaffolding.80
Scaffolding is a technique a parent can use to break down a large truth or task into
smaller parts; the parent can then transfer responsibility to the child.81
The hope is that
the child would be able to regulate his or her own behavior, which is to make wise and
proper decisions based on cultural norms and the desires of his or her parent.82
Some
theorists argue that a development of “co-regulation” must exist in order for the child and
79A. C. Crouter, S. M. MacDermid, S. M. McHale, and M. Perry-Jenkins,
Parental Monitoring and Perceptions of Children’s School Performance and Conduct in
Single and Dual-earner Families (Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum, 1990), quoted in Bornstein and
Lamb, Developmental Psychology, 26.
80
B. Rogoff, Apprenticeship in Thinking: Cognitive Development in Social
Context (New York: Oxford University Press, 1990), 93-94.
81
Grace J. Craig and Don Baucum, Human Development, 9th
ed. (Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2002), 361.
82
Ibid.
40
parent to reach the best possible place of understanding.83
The correlation can be made
back to the Scriptures studied to identify a parallel in the research presented that the
activity of the parent plays a vital role in the overall success of the education of the child.
This success seems to occur in either the academic or home setting as long as parents are
actively involved in some form in their children’s lives.
Fowler’s Six Stages of Faith Development
Parental monitoring and scaffolding are techniques used in the education and
mental development of school-aged children. As this study intends to investigate the
importance of the parental role in the spiritual education of school-aged children, one
must consider the ability of the child to develop his or her personal belief system.84
This
study places its emphasis on the parents of children who are school-aged, defined as
children ages five-to-eleven, the period modern psychology refers to as “middle
childhood.”85
One prevailing aspect of the school-aged or middle-childhood period is the
child’s ability to connect to or be active in some type of faith development. Professor and
theorist James W. Fowler theorized the existence of six stages of faith development.86
Fowler states that during middle childhood (the period between five-to-eleven years), the
83Ibid., 361-62.
84
James W. Fowler, Stages of Faith: The Psychology of Human Development
and the Quest for Meaning (San Francisco, CA: Harper & Row, 1981).
85
Nancy J. Cobb, Adolescence, 7th
ed. (Sunderland, MA: Sinauer Associated
Publishers, 2010), 372.
86
Ibid.
41
child deals in concrete operational thought.87
Children in this stage of development are
open to accept the views of their parents readily. In the second stage of the theory,
children are classified as being in “a world based on reciprocal fairness and an immanent
justice based on reciprocity.”88
The strength of this stage is in the child’s ability to follow
narratives as “the emergence of story, drama and myth as ways of finding and giving
coherence to experience.”89
Parents should be mindful of the information provided by
Fowler as it appears, based on his work, that children are capable of learning the stories
of the Bible and applying the principles to their lives. The theory of faith development
assists parents in understanding how their children can be reached with biblical
principles.
Religious Identity
During the school-aged or middle-childhood period, children began to develop
a religious identity. A religious identity is developed when an individual becomes aware
of belonging to a religious group.90
While many may argue over the importance of being
part of a religious group, or of which group one should be a part, the reality is that, at
some point, children will develop an identity relating to a religious group. Even if
children possess an absence of religious identity, they will develop one during this period
of human development. This identity is developed through the association of the parents’
87Ibid.
88
Joann W. Conn, Women’s Spirituality: Resources for Christian Development
(New York: Paulist, 1986), 227-28.
89
Ibid., 228.
90
Cobb, Adolescence, 373.
42
religious example.91
According to this thought, parents play the decisive role in the
molding of their children’s religious identification. Therefore, the comprehension of
biblical truth is essential to parents who desire their children to be associated with the
Christian faith. Thus, the role of the mother and father will be the greatest indicator of a
child’s religious association.
Mother’s Role
Mothers are often considered to be warm, loving, selfless, caring, and
accepting.92
While many children revere their mothers, seemingly, this appreciation is
often not received by mothers, thus making motherhood seem less than prestigious.93
“When stacked up against money, power, and achievement, motherhood unfortunately
doesn’t fare too well, and mothers rarely receive the appreciation they want.”94
To
compound the issue further, society often attributes fault to the mother when a child fails
to succeed or achieve desired accomplishments. According to secular writers, mothers are
the target of blame—even though fathers have assumed increased child-rearing
responsibilities.95
The role of the mother has morphed over the years and now is that of
91
Ibid.
92
M. W. Matlin, The Psychology of Women, 6th
ed. (Belmont, CA: Wadsworth,
2008), 175.
93
Ibid.
94
John W. Santrock, Adolescence, 13th
ed. (New York: McGraw Hill,
2010), 279.
95
Ibid.
43
primary caretaker, influencer, and financial contributor of the family.96
The influence of
the feminist movement has propelled women to become more concerned about achieving
their career goals rather than being a mother to their children, a wife to their husbands, or
a manager of their homes.97
The biblical view of the role of the mother is a stark contrast in comparison to
the secular view. According to the Bible, mothers are to be revered and obeyed.98
In Titus
2:3-5, the Apostle Paul “admonishes the older women to teach the younger women,
among other things, ‘to love their husbands and children, . . . to be busy at home
(οἰκουργός, Greek, literally ‘home-workers’).”99
The biblical picture of a woman is that
of a mother who is concerned with the management of her house and the welfare of her
family. Her family does not blame her for its problems; rather, they call her blessed.100
She is not lazy, but strives to be an example and teacher to her children, while managing
the affairs of the household.101
The mother may work outside the home for the benefit of
the family, but her concentration and dedication remains on her family; she does not
become consumed by her outside affairs.102
From a biblical perspective, mothers are
96
Ibid.
97
Piper and Grudem, Recovering Biblical Manhood and Womanhood, 371.
98
Exod 20:12.
99
Piper and Grudem, Recovering Biblical Manhood and Womanhood, 366.
100
Prov 31:28.
101
Prov 31:10-31.
102
Ibid.
44
women dedicated to their families above all else; motherhood is considered a noble
profession and one that a woman should embrace.103
Father’s Role
Throughout the years, fathers have been the primary breadwinners for families;
thus, their ability to spend time with their children is not as great as that of the mother.104
However, research has shown that fathers have increased the amount of time spent with
their children over the past two decades.105
Despite the increase of time, fathers still fall
short in comparison to mothers in the amount of time spent with their children.106
The
description of the father in the Bible is one of a man who spends time with his children
teaching them the various truths of God’s Word.107
Secular research has found that the
father who spends more time with his children, raises children who are well-adjusted,
productive members of society.108
The role of the father from the viewpoint of secular
literature seems to be that of an absent figure whose presence could provide a positive
significant impact. Research demonstrates that “one of every four American children has
103Piper and Grudem, Recovering Biblical Manhood and Womanhood, 371.
104
Santrock, Adolescence, 280.
105
Ibid.
106
Ibid.
107
Deut 6:4-9.
108
Jiri Zuzanek, The Effects of Time Use and Time Pressure on Child Parent
Relationships (Watterloo, Ontario: Otium, 2000), 3.
45
no father in the home to welcome him or her at the time of birth.”109
Of additional note is
that “only 41 percent of today’s children will grow up in a two-parent family.”110
While secular literature paints a vague picture of the role of the father, the need
for his presence in the home is obvious. The Bible paints a clearer picture as to the role of
the father. To give men a clear picture as to what they should strive to be, while on earth
Jesus modeled and pointed out specific attributes of God the Father that men could
emulate with their children. Some of the attributes of the father include being interested
and encouraging to one’s children. God the Father was encouraged to God the Son in
Mark 1:11 when He said, “You are My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.”
Additionally, God modeled for fathers an accepting attitude by choosing to love
humankind. “What manner of love the Father has bestowed on us, that we should be
called children of God!” (1 John 3:1). The Bible says “we love Him because He first
loved us” (1 John 4:19).
Further, fathers are to be committed to their families; abandonment never runs
through his mind as he “bears all things” (1 Cor 13:7). Men are called upon to be caring,
loving, and a unifier of the family. Colossians 3:14 commands men “above all these
things put on love, which is the bond of perfection.” God modeled unselfishness in giving
of that which He loves the most. “For God so loved the world that He gave His only
begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life”
(John 3:16). Fathers should love their families and have the same zeal and fervor as God
does for His people. God’s passion for His people is seen in Zechariah 8:2: “I am zealous
109Piper and Grudem, Recovering Biblical Manhood and Womanhood, 379.
110
Ibid.
46
for Zion with great zeal,” and “with great fervor I am zealous for her.” Finally, children
should be a reflection of the father as the father models right attributes. Jesus declared
that “He who has seen Me has seen the Father” (John 14:9).
Parents’ Role in Education
The parents’ role, as explained by Scripture, is a two-pronged approach that
deals with training and discipline.111
Proverbs 22:6 is the foundation verse for training
children and directing them down a specific path. As explained by Schultz, discipline is
an essential aspect to the education of children in the home. The verse used to champion
this idea is Proverbs 3:12. While Proverbs 22:6 has been examined in detail, the passage
in Proverbs 3:12 reads: “For whom the LORD loves He corrects, Just as a father the son in
whom he delights.” Both Christian and secular writing has been presented concerning
parenting, and while each may differ about specific aspects of parenting, both seem to
agree that parents need to be present and active in the home for the best results to occur.
For parents to accomplish adequately the goal of educating their children, a
consistent activity on the part of the parent in training and disciplining must exist. For the
spiritual educational goal to be reached, parents must be active in the discipline of their
children; however, this discipline must be balanced. Discipline is viewed as keeping one
under control both inwardly and outwardly.112
“If we do not evaluate and balance control,
we will either overprotect or overdiscipline our children.”113
When parents identify the
111
Glen Schultz, Kingdom Education, 2nd
ed. (Nashville: LifeWay Press,
1998), 72.
112
Ibid.
113
Ibid., 73.
47
balance and are able to create an environment that allows the child to know their
boundaries and understand the expectations, they will have a better chance at success.114
The truism of Proverbs 22:6 is still in effect, and the child will have to make
the right choices continually, but the environment created by the parents that includes
discipline as part of the training will foster an attitude in the child that will be most
conducive to living in a godly manner. Thus, the role of parents encompasses a blend of
trainer, disciplinarian, caretaker, and nurturer. The love of the parent must be felt by the
child so that the relationship can be cultivated. When parents build relationship, with
their children, the discipline aspect of parenting will be accepted with less resistance,
because “rules without relationships always breed rebellion.”115
The activity of the parent in terms of being consistent with their message will
greatly benefit the child. Jesus, the master teacher, embodied this by modeling perfect
behavior and responses to all scenarios. While Jesus was perfect, and all parents are
imperfect; parents must remember that they should strive to embody the principles they
are attempting to teach their children. When parents realize that their walk must equal
their talk, they have made the first step of being the primary spiritual educator of their
children. Scripture identifies modeling the right behavior as a necessary first step for all
people. “In both the Ten Commandments and the Sermon on the Mount who we are in
114Ibid., 74.
115
Ibid.
48
the Lord comes before what we do for the Lord.”116
As parents live in accordance to
biblical principles, their ability to teach the maxims will become more impactful.
Implications for Use
While an absence of literature exists relating specifically to the topic of
training parents to be the primary spiritual educators of their children, an overabundance
of documents on parenting and education are available. This fact may be realized through
a review of library or bookstore shelves. The review of literature focused on the parental
involvement and activity of parents as it related to their school-aged child. While the
secular literature presented areas of concern so that children would be productive
members in society,117
the goal of this presentation is not just productive members in
society, but also spiritually obedient children who grow to be godly adults. A parallel
should be considered from parental monitoring and the biblical instruction given to
parents. Deuteronomy 4:9-10, 6:4-9 and 11:18-21 gives implicit instruction to parents on
what they should do to be the primary spiritual educators of their children. Within this
scriptural teaching is the implication that parents spend time with their children. More
exists to the scriptural mandate than simply monitoring the children.
Should parents monitor their children’s actions? According to both secular and
scriptural literature, the answer is yes, but what any parent or practitioner must question
is whether monitoring is enough. The summation of the argument, with consideration to
116William R. Yount, Created to Learn (Nashville: Broadman & Holman
Publishers, 1996), 345.
117
Lamb, Hwang, Ketterlinus and Fracasso, Parent-child Relationships, quoted
in Bornstein and Lamb, Developmental Psychology, 26.
49
the research, seems to be no, because of the need to do more than simply observe. Action
is involved in the raising of a child—primarily, the actions of leading the child to
accepting Christ as Lord and Savior, and the continued work of learning as much about
God and His Word as possible throughout one’s life.118
The goal of Scripture is to make
children life-long students of God’s word rather than just productive members of
society.119
Of the literature reviewed, possibly the most intriguing to this writer was the
use of an educational technique referred to as scaffolding. This technique was designed as
a progressive tool used to assist in the education of children by breaking down large
truths into smaller units, allowing the child to learn the material.120
As the child learns the
information, the parent can then transfer responsibility to the child.121
Scaffolding holds
value, as the goal of the parent is to help the child become a responsible, God-fearing
adult. Co-regulating the child’s behavior is an important aspect in scaffolding. In fact, the
goal of scaffolding is for the child to be able to regulate his or her own behavior in an
acceptable fashion.122
This thought process agrees with the Christian writing that states a balance
must be struck between the outward control of the parent and the inward self-control of
118Schultz, Kingdom Education, 32.
119
Ibid.
120
Rogoff, Apprenticeship in Thinking, 94.
121
Craig and Baucum, Human Development, 361.
122
Ibid., 361-62.
50
the child.123
Children’s inward control should increase as they get older, and the parents’
outward control of the children should decrease at the same gradual level.124
The
principles that constitute the scaffolding technique appear to match the biblical principles
of parental education, specifically Proverbs 22:6. The job of parents is to take the large
truth, which is the entire Word of God, and teach it to their children. At the same time,
the principles and absolutes of Scripture must be taught to the children in such a way that
the children are able to apply the maxims to their lives. The result should be children who
fear, love, and honor God with their lives. When one considers the co-regulation aspect
of scaffolding, it is apparent that, as the parents direct their children down the right path,
a gradual release of responsibility occurs. Proverbs 22:6, as previously noted, is a truism
not a guarantee.125
Therefore, the parent is actively involved in the release of
responsibility to their child as he or she grows into adulthood. Parents who follow the
biblical principles laid out in Scripture would most likely fulfill the axioms of the
scaffolding technique.
Fowler’s six stages of faith development chronicle a child’s journey of ability
to comprehend matters of faith.126
Fowler states what the Bible already implies in that
school-aged, or as he stated, “middle childhood” children are capable of comprehending
spiritual truths. While Fowler attempts to dissect the type of faith that can be developed,
Jesus’ words clarify the subject: “Let the little children come to Me, and do not forbid
123Schultz, Kingdom Education, 74.
124
Ibid., 74.
125
Caldwell, Raising G Rated Kids in an R Rated World, 13.
126
Cobb, Adolescence, 372.
51
them; for of such is the kingdom of God. Assuredly, I say to you, whoever does not
receive the kingdom of God as a little child will by no means enter it” (Mark 10:14-15).
Jesus not only identifies that children are capable of developing faith, but He
also surpasses this by explaining that they were capable of saving faith. In fact, one could
argue that the faith of children is the model of faith that all people should have regardless
of age or any other factor of position or authority. Jesus’ words carried a significant
weight with the people, because “at the age of five, children began to learn the arts and
duties of life under the care of their fathers.”127
Children display a considerable amount
of faith in their lives as they are totally dependent on their parents for survival. In the
same manner, Jesus desires for all people to have the same type of faith on Him as the
children have on their parents. Therefore, the usefulness of this tool may not be as greatly
needed as one may have suspected.
Another aspect of the importance of the parental role in the spiritual education
of school-aged children is the acknowledgment of religious identity. It may be useful to
acknowledge that, at a certain age, children possess the awareness to identify with a
religious group.128
What could possibly be important about this finding is that this could
help parents to recognize that their children are beginning to develop a religious identity.
This study could be crucial as a railing point of this research that attempts to entice
parents into the action of teaching spiritual truths to their children. Religious identity
127
M. G. Easton, Easton’s Bible Dictionary (Oak Harbor, WA: Logos Research
Systems, 1996).
128
Cobb, Adolescence, 373.
52
appears to have a place within Scripture, as children are said to have the ability to obtain
a personal relationship with Jesus Christ.129
The role of the mother and father in secular literature differs greatly to that of
Christian literature. While the differences are great, and could be noted in detail, what is
most important are the few similarities, one of which is the repeated statement of the need
for interaction between parents and children.130
Interaction between the parents and
children is not important; rather, it is imperative. According to Scripture, the design to
train a child in the way he should go involves a mother and father working in tandem to
complete the rearing of the child. Unfortunately, divorce has invaded far too many homes
in this country, and has left many parents with the difficult job of two on the back of one.
The role of the father in secular literature has declared that the father is basically an
absentee, and the mother is the target for all blame.131
This finding has found itself to be
true, but at the fault of the parents. Mothers and fathers alike are commanded to be
involved in the spiritual education of their children, an education that would include the
acceptance of personal responsibility and the command of God on children to honor their
mothers and fathers.132
129Luke 18:15-17.
130
Santrock, Adolescence, 280.
131
Ibid., 279-80.
132
Deut 6:4-9; Matt 12:37; Gal 6:5; and Exod 20:12.
53
Conclusion
The Bible is clear in its instruction to parents to be the primary spiritual
educators of their school-aged children. The numerous passages from God’s Word should
serve as an alarm as one considers the secular literature’s observations of the modern
family. The most alarming feature of the secular research and literature is that, for the
most part, the items reviewed were simple observations. The failure of the family was not
reported, because parents were incapable and inept, but that they were apathetic to their
children’s needs. Pursuit of a career, a deteriorated family unit composed of parts that fail
to complete the whole as God designed, along with other factors, has resulted in a
generation that lacks a religious identity and biblical principles.
The summation of the material featured in this section brings to light the need
for a response to the epidemic that has swept this nation. Parents must fulfill God’s plan
as the primary spiritual educators of their children. For parents to succeed in this
endeavor, they will need to increase their own spiritual acuities and learn how to transmit
and disseminate their biblical knowledge to their children in an effective manner. The
fulfillment of Deuteronomy 6:4-9 is not an impossible task to complete, but rather, a
welcomed challenge to the well-equipped parent. Therefore, the construction of a
research that will lead parents to the goal of God’s plan for them as parents is of the
utmost importance, and will be considered in detail in the following section.
54
CHAPTER 3
THE PLAN
Introduction
Chapter 1 provided an explanation of the problem facing the ministry setting of
The Ridge Baptist Church and Tate Springs Baptist Church. Chapter 2 explained the
theological foundation and provided a historical review of literature regarding spiritual
education in the family. Chapter 3 will explain the details of the project.
Purpose Statement
The purpose of this research is to investigate the importance of the parental
role in the spiritual education of school-aged children. Research has placed a spotlight on
the glaring problem that is causing churches to lose an entire generation of people.1 This
research intends to create an excitement about returning to biblical instruction for parents.
The hope of this writer is that the parents involved in this research will learn
principles from God’s Word to share with their children. Additionally, this writer
anticipates that, because of this research, children will feel comfortable in speaking to
their parents about spiritual matters and, in turn, parents will be equipped to answer
questions that arise. While the teachings are thousands of years old, the truths have
survived the test of time. With a renewed emphasis on parent-child relationships, the
1Pinkney, “Report.”
55
writer is optimistic that this will have a profound impact on those associated with The
Ridge Baptist Church and Tate Springs Baptist Church.
Population
Participants in this study will be parents, grandparents, or guardians who are
primary caregivers to children between the grades of kindergarten and fourth grade. The
approximate ages of the children will range between five-to-ten years of age. The age of
the primary caregiver is only a secondary item of interest. Other areas of consideration—
such as occupation, age, ethnicity, or any other outside factor—will be considered
secondary to the study. Research participants will be members or regular attendees of The
Ridge Baptist Church, Tate Springs Baptist Church, or any of the ministries associated
with the two churches.
Goals and Outcomes
Goal One: The writer will develop and implement a research plan to enhance
participants’ knowledge, attitude, and skills so that they can fulfill their parental
roles in the spiritual education of school-aged children.
Cognitive: Participants will identify biblical truths of which they were not
previously aware.
Affective: Participants will differentiate their attitudes between the biblical design
of parental responsibility and their own ideas.
Application: Participants will integrate the biblical truths into their own lives by
modeling and teaching the precepts to their children.
Goal Two: The writer will then determine: (a) how well the research plan was
prepared, (b) how effectively the research was implemented, (c) how much
change was brought about in the ministry setting as a result of the research, and
(d) the contribution this research has made to the parents’ abilities to be the
spiritual educators in the lives of their children.
56
Measurement Tools
The writer will interview each family participating in the research. The
interview will be used to determine the parents’ base level of biblical competency, the
parents’ attitudes toward biblical responsibility of parenting, and the parents’ activity
levels in educating their children in precepts from the Bible (Appendix 2). Interviews will
be conducted of all participants at the beginning and again at the end of the research.
Results from both interviews will be compared to measure the impact and progress made
during the research. Additionally, the interview will allow the writer opportunities to
discuss with each participant the strengths and weaknesses associated with the research.
Each family will complete an enrollment card at the end of the initial interview that will
ask for pertinent information needed for the research, as well as a commitment to attend
all sessions and to participate in the exit interview (Appendix 3). The writer expects to
see an average increase of three points per category in the pre and post parent interview
(Appendix 3).
Procedures
Research will take place on the campus of Tate Springs Baptist Church, located
at 4001-A; Little Road, Arlington; Texas. The six sessions will take place in room 208 of
the Christian school building. Each session will last approximately one hour and fifteen
minutes. The sessions will be held on Wednesdays while the children are involved in the
regular age-specified programming. The room provides sufficient square footage, as well
as access to a multimedia projector.
Each of the six sessions will follow the same format, but will teach different
biblical truths (Appendix 4). Sessions will include a moment for prayer and the asking of
57
God’s blessing upon the time of study. Once the prayer has concluded, scriptural truths
will be introduced. The introduction will include personal stories from the writer, video
clips, and other methods of drawing participants’ attention into the area of study. The
introduction will play a valuable role in the overall success of the lesson; therefore, a
sufficient amount of time will be granted as deemed necessary to capture the attention of
the participants. The primary objective of this portion of the session will be to draw the
affective side of the participants into the discussion of doctrine. The writer will
accomplish this objective by connecting participants to the spiritual truth/topic discussed.
This section, with prayer, will take approximately fifteen minutes.
The scriptural foundation is the portion of the session that focuses on the
writer’s teaching of scriptural truths to the participants. This teaching will focus on
presenting six doctrinal teachings to the participants. Each week, one doctrine will be
introduced through a primary passage of Scripture, which the writer will exegete. This
period of teaching will allow for an interaction between the writer and the participants.
Participants will be encouraged to ask questions during this period of the session.
Scriptural foundation for the doctrinal teaching must be understood by the participants
during this portion of the session. Parents’ ability to comprehend the truth taught is
necessary in order for the parents to teach the spiritual truth to their children at a later
time. This portion of the session will last twenty to twenty-five minutes.
Once the scriptural truth is taught, a period for applying the truth will be
introduced. The objective during this period of time will be to relate the scriptural truth
taught to the lives of the participants. The application section will focus on specific ways
the Bible affects the way a Christian should live his or her life. Special attention will be
given to how participants should react now that they are aware of the scriptural truth.
58
This section will utilize illustrations of scenarios that identify clearly the actions of the
believer because of the truth presented. This portion of the session will last approximately
ten minutes.
Once the truth has been introduced, taught, and applied, the project leader will
introduce the methodology of teaching the same scriptural truth to children. Parents will
be encouraged at this point to be creative in their presentation of scriptural truths by
relating things the child already knows to the scriptural truth.2 Using the principle of
Deuteronomy 6:7, the writer will guide the participants through practical ways to teach
these truths. Specific ways to introduce the topic will be presented, as well as ways to
make the topic relevant to children. Potential questions from children will be fielded, as
well as ways to teach the truth in a clear and concise manner. Practical teaching of certain
biblical truths will be provided in written form through a handout created by the project
leader (Appendix 5). The participants’ ability to understand how to demonstrate scriptural
truths to their children will be vital to the success of the research. Therefore, this aspect
of the research is crucial and considers a significant amount of attention. The primary
way the writer will instruct the parents to teach is through the use of examples.3 During
learning periods, children often use schemas to relate what they are learning to what they
already know. Therefore, the use of examples and object lessons seemingly are the best
2Tim Elmore, Generation iY: Our Last Chance to Save Their Future (Atlanta:
Poet Gardener Publishing, 2010), 184.
3Ibid.
59
ways to communicate both simple and complex spiritual truths.4 This section will last
approximately fifteen minutes.
The final section of the session will incorporate the activity of discussion
strategies of teaching scriptural truths. Previous examples provided will be discussed for
usefulness within the family structure. An examination of potential obstacles in the
introduction and teaching of the topic to the participants’ children will be discussed. Each
of the participants will develop a plan of action. Their plans of action will include: a
targeted time to teach the truth, a method of introducing the topic to the child, the
outcome the parent hopes to achieve, and a place for the participant to record whether the
object was achieved or not (Appendix 6). Each of these areas will be recorded on a
weekly basis and returned to the writer at the beginning of each meeting. This session
will end with a word of prayer. This section will last approximately ten minutes.
Resources
To complete this research a number of costs must be accounted for to ensure
the completion of the research. One of the monetary expenses is the use of a facility to
hold the six sessions. Tate Springs has allowed the writer use of its facility at no charge.
This includes the time required for set-up, and the use of projector, utilities, and cleaning
expenses. For the research to draw as many families as desired, a significant amount of
promotional materials is required (Appendices 7-9). A graphic artist has been acquired,
and will volunteer her services for the design and development of all promotional items
related to the research. Tate Springs has donated the use of a plotter and copier for all
4David Jacobson, Paul Eggen, and Donald Kauchak, Methods for Teaching: A
Skills Approach, 4th
ed. (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Merrill Prentice Hall, 1993), 182.
60
signs, bulletin inserts, and flyers for the research study. In addition to the promotional
material, the church has offered the writer free printing for all materials related to the
research. Given the milieu related to the research, childcare is a necessary consideration.
The church has worked with the writer to make this part of its Wednesday offering to the
church congregation; thus, childcare is already provided for the other ministries of the
church. Other monetary expenses for this research will include travel expense to conduct
approximately twenty entrance interviews and twenty exit interviews, a cost estimated at
fifty dollars.
Another major cost to completing this research will be time. Approximately
fifty hours will be required between entrance and exit interviews, along with
approximately eight hours to complete the six sessions. Additionally, the writer will need
to allow for preparation time and collection of materials for each session, which will take
approximately five hours each week. The construction and development of PowerPoint
slides and handouts before the research begins will take approximately fifty hours. The
projected timeline for this research to commence is July 2011, at which time the writer
will complete the interview guide. The writer will spend the second week of the month
focused solely on the development, review, and finalization of the curriculum for the six
sessions. After the research is approved, in September 2011, the promotional materials
will be finalized and materials will be distributed. The research will start in September
and conclude the final week of October. All exit interviews will be completed by the first
week of November.
61
Assumptions
Multiple assumptions are present, some of which deal directly with the parents
involved in the study, while other assumptions relate to the writer and his goals for the
research. For the successful completion of this research, the writer will have to work
under the following assumptions. Of the assumptions made by the writer, the first is that
at least ten-to-twelve families will be willing to participate in the research. Another
assumption is that at least ten families will attend all six sessions from beginning to end.
A further assumption is that the parents will complete the outside assignments given in
the sessions. The parents are assumed to have an interest in the subject matter that is
planned to be taught by the writer. The completion of the weekly journal will provide the
data necessary to assess how and whether the object lessons and teaching method was
successful. Without the journaling and completion of assignments, no objective data will
be available for proof of success or failure of the research goals. An additional
assumption is that the parents involved in the research will maintain some level of
spiritual maturity. The writer assumes that the children will maintain some level of
willingness to participate with their parents in the learning activities. Along with spiritual
maturity, parents will need to have the desire to fulfill the biblical commands God
provides in Scripture.
Other assumptions do not relate directly to the parents involved in the research.
These assumptions include the interview process. First, the writer assumes that he will be
able to secure the proper number of interviews and complete them prior to the first
session. The interview guide is assumed to be sufficient to provide adequate information
to assess. Another assumption is that the writer will be able adequately to teach the
information to the parents in a way that they can comprehend. In addition to this, the
62
writer assumes he will be able to instruct the parents in a methodology of informal
teaching that they will then be able adequately to teach the information to their children.
Additionally, the writer assumes that the parents will be able to recognize opportunities
the biblical truths to teach their children. The final assumption of the writer is that the
research goal will be attained. The writer’s goal is to witness parents learn spiritual truths
and intentionally teach those truths to their children in informal settings.
Limitations
While this research endeavors to maintain a specific goal, a number of
limitations must be considered as the completion of the research takes place.
1. This research is limited to the members and regular attendees of The Ridge Baptist
Church and Tate Springs Baptist Church who have at least one child between the
grades of kindergarten and fourth grade.
2. This research is limited to a six-week period from September 14, 2011 to October 26,
2011.
3. This research is limited to the topic of spiritual training and equipping of parents to be
their children’s primary spiritual educators.
4. This research is limited to one instructor on the topic of parental education and
equipping.
5. This research is limited to the physical and mental abilities of the selected members.
Key Definitions
This research uses some words that need a definition attached for the sake of
clarity. Listed below are the following words:
1. Parents: one who is the biological mother or father of a child or children; one who is
a legal guardian or one who is the primary caretaker of the child.
2. Primary spiritual educator: an individual who provides the most education to the
child on matters relating to God or the Bible.
63
3. School-aged children: a child who is between the grades of kindergarten to the
completion of fourth grade.
64
CHAPTER 4
PROJECT REPORT
Introduction
The project designed for this research was entitled “Parenting with a Purpose.”
The project was planned in a workshop fashion. Each session was intended to focus on an
area of doctrinal truth. Additionally, participants were given materials to assist in the
spiritual training of their children. The following will report on the events of each
session.
Session Reports
The project spanned six weeks and followed a similar format each week
(Appendix 4). Six doctrinal truths were taught during the sessions. The six truths include:
the Bible, God, Jesus, the Holy Spirit, man, and salvation. Additionally, sessions included
the distribution of the “Ready-Made Object Lessons” (Appendix 5) and weekly journals
(Appendix 6).
Session One
The first session took place on the campus of Tate Springs Baptist Church,
located at 4001-A Little Road, Arlington, Texas, in room 208 of the Christian school
building. The session lasted approximately one hour and fifteen minutes. As the
participants entered, they received an enrollment card and parent interview (Appendices
2-3). There were ten total participants involved in the in the duration of the project.
65
Participants were given instructions regarding both documents and a brief welcome to the
project. After sufficient time was given to complete the documents, a formal welcome
was given, which included an explanation of the nature and purpose of the project. The
project leader gave a brief personal history of how this issue grew in importance to him,
which served as an introduction to the spiritual truth for the evening.
The first biblical passage introduced in the session was Deuteronomy 6:4-9.
The passage was featured as the foundational passage of this research. Deuteronomy 6:4-
9 was read and an explanation was given. Emphasis was made on the application of the
passage as it relates to the parental responsibility of educating one’s child in God’s Word.
Parents were encouraged to compare the instruction in God’s Word to their daily
activities and interaction with their children. God’s methodology of educating children in
the principles and practices of daily living was presented, and the necessity of knowing
God’s Word from a personal perspective was emphasized.
The project leader expressed the importance of daily Bible study and prayer
time for the realization of the closest relationship with God. An explanation was given
that parents must know and be willing to continue to learn the Word of God to fulfill
God’s imperative instruction from the Deuteronomy passage. Once this was established,
the project leader transitioned to the doctrinal emphasis of the first session. The Bible
was introduced first with an explanation of 2 Timothy 3:15-17 and 2 Peter 1:21. The
credibility, infallibility, and purpose of God’s Word were presented. Parents were
encouraged to see the Bible as God’s love letter to mankind and as the source for
doctrine, reproof, correction, and instruction in righteousness. The goal of this teaching
was stress why the Bible is important.
66
After completion of the teaching on the Bible, the project leader discussed how
a truth such as why the Bible is important could be taught to children. The project leader
discussed the facets of education as it relates to school-aged children and the influence
parents have on their children. The booklet entitled “Ready-made Object Lessons” was
distributed (Appendix 5), and instructions for use of the tool were given. The project
leader explained how the booklet could be used to introduce such topics as the
importance of the Bible and subsequent spiritual truths to one’s child. Examples were
given on how specific object lessons were used to instruct the project leader’s children
and what type of responses could be expected. Parents were advised to consider their
child’s education level, personality, and any other factor that could affect the teaching of
a spiritual truth prior to the introduction of a truth.
Parents were encouraged to select one of the object lessons in the booklet
(Appendix 5) and plan a time to teach their child or children the spiritual truth. Questions
such as “How do you plan to communicate this truth your child?” and “Do you believe
you have a sufficient understanding to teach the selected spiritual truth?” were asked in
an attempt to challenge the parents’ preparedness to face the challenges. Parents were
given a paper titled “weekly journal” (Appendix 6) and were asked to provide feedback
regarding their preparation and execution of their attempts at teaching their children a
spiritual truth. Once this document was distributed, parents were invited to ask questions
regarding any of the information discussed, presented, or distributed. After all questions
were answered to the satisfaction of the parents, the project leader closed the session with
a word of prayer.
67
Session Two
The second session featured a location move from 4001-A Little Road,
Arlington, Texas, room 208 of the Christian school building to the main campus on 4201
Little Road, room 151. This move was made for the convenience of all parties involved.
The classroom was outfitted with a large flat-screen television for the display of
PowerPoint slides, and was located near the childcare area. Participants unable to make
the previous session were emailed a handout and weekly journal (Appendix 6) to
complete during the week. The project leader followed the lesson plan that was presented
in Appendix 4.
Session two began with prayer, followed by an open discussion of the parents’
first attempt at engaging their children in spiritual conversations. Parents discussed
difficulties as well as success. Advice and instructions were provided by the project
leader to ensure the optimal level of success in future endeavors in sharing God’s Word
with children.
The project leader introduced the session two topic by reaffirming the
command given by God in Deuteronomy 6:4-9. With the command of God placed on the
parent to be the primary spiritual educator, the project leader explained that no topic
could be avoided regardless of the difficulty. The project leader then introduced the
subject of the existence of God. A reminder was issued that, before one can teach on a
particular subject, he or she must first develop more than a simple working knowledge of
the subject. In the previous session, the Bible was presented as the believer’s guidebook
to life and the source for all the answers one would need in life. The main character in
God’s Word is God; therefore, it was essential that His existence be examined throughout
the Bible. However, the project leader explained that arguments for the existence of God
68
must be approached in such a way that children are capable of comprehending and
repeating the argument in their own words. Therefore, the project leader presented two
arguments for the existence of God.
The first argument presented was the cosmological argument, which is easily
seen in both Scripture and in daily life. The project leader explained how children are
concrete thinkers, and how primarily those between the ages of seven and eleven years
would need to have information presented in these terms. This argument was helpful
because of various scriptures relating to God’s creation and the proof of His existence.
The second argument presented was the teleological argument. Parents were able to see
how God’s existence is seen by the very nature of things in the world and the universe.
This argument appealed to the concrete operational thinking of children by describing
how the law of entropy affects one’s conclusion that God must exist. Children understand
that some toys need batteries to run and that someone had to put the batteries in place, or
how someone had to wind the wind-up toy for it to operate. Parents were encouraged to
consider how their children think and the impact these principles and arguments have in
terms of eternity and the present moment.
The application of these two arguments was presented via object lessons for
the parents. The project leader used a banana, hula hoop, and aluminum can to illustrate
how the scientific laws applied and how Scripture is proven by these factors. Parents
were encouraged to consider the object lessons used by the project leader to see how
objects can be used in a teaching situation. The project leader led the parents to examine
the “Ready-made Object Lessons” booklet (Appendix 5) and to see the examples given
for the teaching of the existence of God. A discussion ensued as to how the lesson could
be implemented and how the arrangement of time and circumstances could be engineered
69
to the parents’ benefit. Questions were answered regarding how best to use the object
lessons and what to expect from children as various topics are being taught. Weekly
journals (Appendix 6) were collected for the previous week, new journal pages were
provided, and parents discussed what they hoped to accomplish in the following week.
The second session closed with a word of prayer.
Session Three
The location of the third session remained on the main campus of Tate Springs
Baptist Church in room 151. Attendance was down slightly from the second session, but
accommodations were made for those who could not attend. The project leader
communicated via e-mail with those who missed the session, and the session was
recorded and posted on The Ridge Baptist Church website. All sessions were recorded to
allow participants the opportunity to catch up on missed sessions or to review what had
been discussed in the previous sessions. Absent participants were e-mailed weekly
journals (Appendix 6) and handouts for the missed session. The third session followed
the lesson plan as presented in Appendix 4.
The third session began with a word of prayer and open dialogue concerning
the past week’s successes and difficulties. Participants openly discussed their
advancement and findings in becoming their children’s primary spiritual educator. The
discussion allowed parents to express their progress and difficulties in educating their
children. This allowed the project leader to assess what adjustments needed to be made in
upcoming sessions. Parents noted a great satisfaction in sharing biblical truths to their
children and fostering conversations that centered on the Bible, doctrine, and Christian
principles for daily living.
70
In the previous session, the existence of God was examined, and arguments
made from both creation and the nature of things with an emphasis on the law of entropy.
With this in mind, the project leader made notice of the central figure of the Bible. This
figure is the hope of the Old Testament and is realized in person in the New Testament.
Jesus stands as the focal point of God’s Word. The project leader placed emphasis on the
deity of Christ and His active role in the creation of the world. The relationship between
God the Father and God the Son was examined. Emphasis was placed on His equal union
with God the Father as well as the eternality of Jesus. In addition to Jesus’ deity, His
purpose was examined in-depth. The purpose of Christ was explained as Jesus’ sacrificial
death and victorious resurrection. The role Jesus played in the redemption of mankind
was presented, along with a plethora of passages for parents to be able to reference and
consider in the teaching of this truth.
Parents were challenged to apply the truth of who Christ is to their own lives.
While all parents involved claimed to have already accepted Christ as Savior, each was to
consider the truths about Him that were discussed and how these truths would be received
by their children. The project leader placed a great deal of emphasis on the importance of
the presentation of Jesus to the children. Various unbiblical teachings as well as common
misconceptions were discussed, and sound biblical answers were given in a proactive
defense to difficulties in comprehension the children may have.
Parents were shown a number of different object lessons from the “Ready-
made Object Lessons” (Appendix 5) as it related to Jesus. The object lessons (Appendix
5) were discussed, and the writer presented each lesson in a “how-to” format. Scenarios
were created and discussed regarding the usage of each of the object lessons (Appendix
5), and anticipation was made regarding potential questions the parents should expect to
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field. Once the discussion was complete, the project leader acquired the participation of
some of the participants to engage in the role-play of some of the object lessons from the
booklet (Appendix 5). The project leader assumed the role of parent, while participants
filled the role of the child. Participants embraced the role of a child posing difficult
replies back to the writer. This allowed the project leader to demonstrate how the parent
could handle various questions. Each question was answered from the perspectives of not
knowing the answer and knowing and providing the answer for the child. The project
leader illustrated how the parents could handle situations where parents were posed
questions for which they might not be ready or for which they had not yet attained a
comfortable level of knowledge to answer the question with confidence. Additionally the
project leader demonstrated the advantage of anticipating questions and having a
thoughtful answer ready prior to the question being asked. Once the role-playing was
completed, weekly journals (Appendix 6) were collected and questions were completed
regarding what object lessons (Appendix 5) should be used in the upcoming week. The
third session ended with a word of prayer.
Session Four
The location of the fourth session remained on the main campus of Tate
Springs Baptist Church in room 151. The attendance increased from the third session.
However, a couple of participants were missing from this session. Accommodations were
made for those who could not attend. The project leader communicated via e-mail with
those who missed the session, and the session was recorded and posted on The Ridge
Baptist Church website. The project leader e-mailed weekly journals (Appendix 6) to the
absentees and fielded questions regarding the teaching and execution of the object lessons
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(Appendix 5). Additionally, the project leader verified the website’s tracking system that
the sessions were actually accessed. The fourth session followed the lesson plan as
presented in Appendix 4.
The fourth session began with a word of prayer and an invitation to discuss the
previous week’s successes and difficulties in the presentation of the object lesson
(Appendix 5). Parents expressed an increased level of success stating their abilities better
to discern the time and factors surrounding when they chose to teach the spiritual truth.
During the discussion, the project leader explained that planning a spontaneous moment
often provided the best result in terms of the child’s receptive attitude to the teaching.
The project leader pointed out that planning a spontaneous moment may appear to be
oxymoronic, but the idea maintains a certain quality illuminated in Scripture. The Bible
states in 1 Peter 3:15: “But sanctify the Lord God in your hearts, and always be ready to
give a defense to everyone who asks you a reason for the hope that is in you, with
meekness and fear.”
The project leader explained that the parents’ abilities to give a defense of their
faith, at any moment, to their children are the fulfillment of the basic principle behind
Deuteronomy 6:4-9. The planning of when and how the object lesson (Appendix 5) is
presented is vitally important. The project leader contended that the object lessons
(Appendix 5) would be received better if the parent carefully considered the topic and the
factors surrounding the presentation of the subject. In addition to this, the project leader
stated as essential that the object lesson (Appendix 5) be presented in such a way that the
child does not realize that this was a prepared teaching event. He explained further that
the parents’ ability to engage their child in conversation would not only increase the
likelihood of success of the teaching, but would open the lines of communication for
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further questions. In addition, opening the lines of communication would foster continued
growth in the parent-child relationship and increase the probability of a better relationship
into the teenage years. The project leader pointed out that the only way learning would
occur was through the work of the Holy Spirit, thus introducing the spiritual truth studied
in the fourth session.
The Holy Spirit’s work and purpose was studied in depth in the fourth session.
Participants were educated on the indwelling of the Holy Spirit at the moment of
conversion, as well as His work convicting the individual of their sins prior to
conversion. The most important aspect of the teaching for the participants was the
discussion of the activity of the Holy Spirit as it relates to the sealing of the believer. The
parents were concerned with being able to express adequately to their children, who had
already accepted Christ, that their salvation was secured. Therefore, extra time was spent
speaking of the Holy Spirit’s work within the believer and the implications for all
believers.
The project leader made it clear that when a person accepts Christ, and the
Holy Spirit comes into him or her, that a person receives all of the Spirit—not just a
portion of the Spirit. Being filled with the Holy Spirit was likened to mercury in a
thermometer. The thermometer always contains the same amount of mercury just like the
amount of the Holy Spirit inside the believer is always the same. Thus, being filled with
the Spirit is dependent on the believer’s choosing to walk in the Spirit—that is living and
doing those things that bring honor and glory to God. Additionally, a discussion ensued
as to how the Holy Spirit’s indwelling could be expressed or taught to children struggling
with the work of the Holy Spirit in their life.
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In addition to the sealing work of the Holy Spirit, emphasis was placed on the
teaching work of the Spirit. Parents were reminded that their best efforts to teach their
children were only opportunities that they were providing for the Holy Spirit to complete
the job of teaching the child. Therefore, importance was placed on the prayer life and
obedience of the parent in maintaining a proper walk with God. Parents were encouraged
by the empowerment given to all believers by the Holy Spirit and were reminded to be
confident in their presentations; knowing that the very power of God was with them as
they taught their children. The teaching on the Holy Spirit concluded with how one can
see the results of the Holy Spirit living inside them. The project leader went through
Galatians 5:22-23, explaining the Fruit of the Spirit and how believers should produce
evidence of the Holy Spirit’s indwelling.
Parents discussed how the principles concerning the Holy Spirit could be
taught in their respective homes. The project leader presented more “Ready-made Object
Lessons” (Appendix 5). Participants role-played through various scenarios. Parents were
able to work through different object lessons (Appendix 5) and to consider how they
needed to prepare themselves to teach the lessons in their homes. In addition to role-
playing, parents discussed other attempts that they had made at teaching spiritual truths,
along with ideas for developing scenarios in their home that would give them the best
opportunity to teach specific biblical truths to their children. During the part of the
session where parents were encouraged to put the lessons into action, the project leader
presented new object lessons (Appendix 5) that were not included in the original handout.
These lessons included the use of the popular toy Legos and additional ways to teach the
existence of God. The fourth session concluded with the collection of weekly journals
(Appendix 6), followed by a prayer.
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Session Five
The location of the fifth session remained on the main campus of Tate Springs
Baptist Church in room 151. The attendance remained steady from the fourth session;
however, a couple of participants were absent from this session. Accommodations were
made for those who could not attend. The project leader communicated via e-mail with
those who missed the session, and the session was recorded and posted on The Ridge
Baptist Church website. The project leader e-mailed weekly journals (Appendix 6) to
those absent and fielded questions regarding the teaching and execution of the object
lessons. Additionally, the project leader verified the website’s tracking system that the
sessions were accessed. The fifth session followed the lesson plan as presented in
Appendix 4.
The fifth session began with prayer and led to a discussion of the parents’ past
week attempts at sharing God’s Word with their children. Parents expressed a great deal
of success, believing that as the weeks progressed, they felt more comfortable using the
“Ready-made Object Lessons” (Appendix 5) and understanding how the tool was best
used in their situation. Parents communicated an excitement about being able to make the
contact and introduction of spiritual topics in a natural manner with their children. Some
parents stated that they had been active in sharing the Word of God with their children,
but had never consciously developed a plan to spread specific biblical truths with their
children. They affirmed that the exercise of completing the weekly journal (Appendix 6)
caused them to strategize how, where, and why they planned to share a biblical truth to
their children each week.
The project leader introduced the topic of man in the fifth session. Man’s sin
nature and condition was studied. The project leader illuminated the Scripture passages
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that spoke of the sinful condition of man. Passages concerning the sinful nature of man
were read, and the project leader noted that man was born a sinner and that this sinful
condition is a result of what happened in the third chapter of Genesis. Questions from the
parents prompted the project leader to give an explanation of the federal and seminal
headship of Christ. The participants continued asking questions regarding the
implications of sin and the law. The project leader discussed why and how death reigned
between the Garden of Eden and the giving of the Law.1
The project leader explained how sin is a blood issue. When Adam sinned
against God, he immediately changed. He may not have felt the change, but his blood
became contaminated by sin. The penalty of sin is death; therefore, man is facing an
imminent curse for his sin. Man, on his own, is eternally hopeless because of this and is
in need of some type of redemption. This is why the innocent blood of animals was used
as a temporary covering of sin and why the blood of Jesus provides a permanent covering
of sin. Blood comes from the father, and since Adam is the father of the human race, the
sinful blood has been passed down throughout the generations. Therefore, when one
considers the virgin birth of Christ, it is realized that the blood flowing through His veins
was not the same contaminated blood of every other person in the human race. Because
of this, Jesus could provide a remedy for man’s sin problem.
This teaching captured the attention of the participants and spurred a discussion
of how that related to them personally as well as the implications the curse of sin had on
their children. The discussion allowed for an opportunity to show how extended
knowledge of a subject is necessary in the instruction of others. Parents were encouraged
1Rom 5:12-14.
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to think ahead of what conversations may arise of just one of the object lessons
(Appendix 5) used from the booklet. In addition to this discussion of man, the purpose of
man was examined. The project leader noted that man’s primary purpose on earth was to
bring honor and glory to God. Parents were challenged to consider how their parenting
could fulfill this purpose. In consideration of man’s temporal state on the earth, the final
aspect of man’s condition was considered and that is the destination of man after he dies.
Based on Scripture, the conclusion was made that when man dies, he either goes to
heaven or hell. The difference depends on whether or not a man has experienced the
salvation that only Christ provides. The project leader announced that the topic of
salvation would be discussed in the final session.
Man’s condition and purpose proved to be an important topic for the
participants in the project. The discussion that ensued regarding how to teach these truths
to children proved to be equally important for the participants. The project leader
maintained the importance of presenting mankind to one’s child as the Bible explains
man’s nature. The Bible illustrates the depravity of man which is important for the
children so that they can see who they are without Christ. Additionally, understanding
man’s sinful state serves as a reminder as to why one continues to sin after salvation.
Mankind is a sinner. The only thing that separates one man from another is the
acceptance of the free gift of eternal life offered by Jesus Christ.
The participants discussed how they could introduce the topic, and utilize the
strategies developed in the session. The parents also discussed how their approach may
change with their children at different ages. The project leader made a point to recognize
how one teaching can splinter into multiple questions ranging in multiple topics and
spiritual truths. The necessity of being a student of God’s Word was reemphasized. The
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only discussion regarded the “Ready-made Object Lessons” (Appendix 5), and no role-
play took place in this session.
Parents were encouraged to select one of the object lessons under the topic of
man (Appendix 5) to teach their children in the following week. Weekly journals
(Appendix 6) were discussed further as a strategic tool, and the previous week’s journals
were collected. The session closed in a word of prayer.
Session Six
The location of the sixth and final session remained on the main campus of
Tate Springs Baptist Church, but was moved across the hall to room 150. The attendance
remained steady from the fifth session; however, a couple of participants were absent
from this session. Accommodations were made for those who could not attend. The
project leader communicated via e-mail with those who missed the session, and the
session was recorded and posted on The Ridge Baptist Church website. The project
leader e-mailed weekly journals (Appendix 6) to absentees and fielded questions
regarding the teaching and execution of the object lessons. Additionally, the project
leader verified the website’s tracking system that the sessions were accessed. The fifth
session followed the lesson plan that was presented in Appendix 4. Arrangements were
made to complete the parental interview (Appendix 2) that doubled as the post test for the
project.
The sixth session began with a word of prayer and the introduction of the topic
of salvation as it relates to the teaching of children. Participants were given a handout
with session notes on it with all blanks already completed. The project leader desired to
lead the group in a discussion on the topic and allow the parents to complete the parent
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interviews (Appendix 2) and maintain the time constraints. Salvation was discussed first
from the standpoint of how it is obtained. The project leader explained that heaven is a
free gift, as explained in Ephesians 2:8-9, and can only be received by the individual’s
free will. Salvation cannot be imposed or forced upon another individual. The project
leader presented a basic way of presenting the salvation message. This method consists of
having the individual admit that he or she is a sinner, then having them state their belief
that Christ died on the cross for their sins, and leading them in confessing their sins to the
Lord. Another area related to the issue of salvation is the security of the believer. This
topic had already been brought up in the discussion concerning man in sessions four and
five, but was only briefly discussed.
In this session, the security of the believer was discussed from the perspectives
of Christ’s death and atoning blood, man’s inability to lose the gift of salvation once
receiving it, God’s unwillingness to renege on a promise made to mankind, and the
inability of Satan or outside factors to take away or cause one to lose his or her salvation.
Additionally, salvation was presented as the inclusion into the family of God and the
promise that God gives concerning those who are his children. The project leader
referenced John 1:12-13, 1 John 5:11-13, and Ephesians 1:13 and 4:30 as passages that
carry the promise of being in and never being cast out of God’s family.
One of the issues brought up from the participants was helping the children to
know for certain that they have truly received the gift of eternal life. This project leader
discussed 1 John 5:13: “These things I have written to you who believe in the name of the
Son of God, that you may know that you have eternal life, and that you may continue to
believe in the name of the Son of God.” The importance of the parents knowing and
having a confidence in their salvation experience is vital to leading a child into the same
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confident state. Therefore, questions were asked about their certainty of where one would
spend eternity if they were to die at that moment. Additionally, participants were asked
what reason they would give to God if he were to ask why they should be allowed into
heaven. This allowed the parents to see the certainty that God has intended for believers
to have concerning their eternal life in Jesus Christ.
The topic of salvation brought a number of concerns from the participants in
this project. One concern regarded the age at which a child is ready to accept Christ as
Savior. The project leader answered the question by contending that the matter could only
be answered on an individual basis, and one should consider the maturity and
understanding of the child before passing any judgment. The project leader added that the
likelihood of a child who has attended church from infancy—or at least the preschool
age—and who has parents who actively discuss and teach God’s Word in the home,
could expect their child to start asking questions regarding salvation at an earlier age.
Parents were warned not to push a child to make a salvation decision, but to allow the
Holy Spirit to do His job of convicting.
The parents’ primary responsibilities to their children prior to salvation is to
teach them the Word of God and to pray regularly that they would heed the leading of the
Holy Spirit and accept the gift of eternal life. A subsequent issue discussed was when to
lead the child in a prayer of acceptance of salvation. Parents were cautioned not to
dismiss their children’s plea to accept Christ. Understanding that if parents teach their
children what salvation is and how it is obtained, it will be natural for the child to use the
vocabulary of the adults who have taught them about salvation. Therefore, they may
express themselves in terms that are beyond their comprehension, but should not be
disqualified by the parent because they could not use their own words.
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Teaching children about salvation is vitally important and the “Ready-made
Object Lessons” (Appendix 5) offered a number of different ways to teach the same
message. However, teaching the lesson was not the concern of the participants. The
greatest need expressed was how to be proactive or, in some cases, reactively guard
against the inevitable doubts that a child may have now or in years to come regarding
their salvation experience. A common ploy of Satan is to cause an adult man or woman to
question the decision they made for Christ as a child. Therefore, as part of the handout,
the project leader included a salvation contract that parents could use when their children
make a decision for Christ.
The project leader explained that the following contract could be used as a
guide for the parent and child to create a document that would solidify the event of the
day allowing the parents to be witness to the most important decision the child will ever
make in his or her life. The project leader added that certain rules should be followed in
the construction of the contract: the child should write it, parental help should be given to
make sure pertinent details are added, the child should sign it, parents and anyone else
who is present should sign as witnesses, and copies should be made and kept in a secure
location. The following was the example given:
I, (child’s name), know that I am a sinner and that Jesus died on the cross and rose
from the dead on the third day for my sins. Today, the (day’s full date), I asked
Jesus to come into my heart and forgive me of my sins. I have made this decision
on my own and completely understand the decision that I have made today in
asking Jesus to come into my heart.
The child would sign and print their name below the contract and date the
document to the side like a regular contract. They would draw a line for each witness to
sign on and label witness under each signature. Below all signatures, the project leader
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suggested that the child write the reference to three passages: Ephesians 2:8-9 to remind
the child that salvation is a free gift that is neither earned nor deserved, and 1 John 4:4
and Ephesians 4:30, each of which should have a star drawn next to it. These two verses
would serve as scripture the children can revisit when Satan attempts to make them doubt
their salvation. Each of these verses emphasizes God’s power to keep them as his
children.
The sixth session concluded with the project leader giving the parent interview
(Appendix 2) to the participants. Once all the completed interviews and weekly journals
(Appendix 6) were collected, the project leader asked for any final questions or
comments. One parent mentioned, and the others in attendance concurred, that they found
the “Ready-made Object Lessons” (Appendix 5) most useful when a number of the
lesson ideas were committed to memory. Participants stated that having the knowledge of
various lessons helped them in identifying teachable moments and expressing biblical
truth in a more precise manner. Additionally, they concurred that they were able to teach
more lessons when they had committed thought to more lessons. One participant stated
that his Bible study was affected in a positive way as his considered teaching spiritual
truths to his children. The project leader encouraged the parents to continue to use the
weekly journals (Appendix 6) as a way of game planning specific truths that they desire
to teach their children. The final session concluded with a word of prayer.
Conclusion
The six sessions that made up the project “Parenting with a Purpose” allowed
the axioms of Deuteronomy 6:4-9 to be presented to a willing participant group. The
variables concerning the project were fulfilled. The facilities were able to satisfy the
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needs of the project. The participants were able to complete the project requirements. The
project leader was able to promote the project adequately, and the goals and assumptions
were able to be measured.
The parents involved showed a sincere desire to fulfill their biblical, God-given
command to be their children’s primary spiritual educators. The project leader was able
to explore the assumptions concerning the parents’ willingness and activity levels.
Specific areas of doctrine were taught and received. Parents confronted their children
with a number of spiritual truths. God was honored through this attempt to be obedient to
the commands given in Scripture.
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CHAPTER 5
PROJECT EVALUATION AND ANALYSIS
Introduction
The project, “Parenting with a Purpose,” was the attempt of developing parents
to become the primary spiritual educators of their children. The project served as a
wonderful opportunity to connect parents to a strategy of fulfilling their God-given
responsibilities to teach their children. For six weeks, parents committed themselves to
developing skills, exercising strategies, and connecting with their children in new and
creative ways. The following will chronicle the progress that was made toward helping
parents fulfill the commandment given in Deuteronomy 6:4-9.
Goal One
The first goal stated in chapter 3 focused on the development and
implementation of a research plan to enhance participants’ knowledge, attitude, and skills
for the purpose of fulfilling their parental roles in the spiritual education of school-aged
children. The writer prepared an instrument that was used for pre-test and post-test
purposes. The instrument was designed to measure the participant’s knowledge of the
Word of God in specific doctrinal areas, gauge perspectives on their attitudes toward the
biblical education of their children, and their current level of participation in the teaching
and modeling of biblical truths to their children. Participants received the parent
interview (Appendix 2) at the beginning of the project and again at the conclusion of the
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project. The same instrument was used for both interviews; no questions were changed or
altered in any way. The parent interview was divided into three parts: attitude, acuity, and
activity. The results for each of these three areas will be discussed in the following pages.
Attitude
Participants were asked to answer six questions using a Likert scale. Their
choices were to circle numbers one through four which represented: never, not often,
often, and always. The first statement read: “I have a desire to teach my children the
Bible and its precepts, but feel inadequate to do so.” Eighty percent of the participants
indicated that “not often” did they feel adequate to teach their children the Bible.
However, when asked to respond to the same statement at the end of the project, 80
percent indicated an increase in their feeling by replying that they “often” feel adequate
to share biblical truths to their children. Only one participant involved in the study
reported that he felt no change in his ability to share biblical truths to his children.
The second statement read: “I believe that it is my responsibility to teach my
children stories from the Bible.” Ninety percent responded “always” to the second
statement. In the conclusion of the project, all participants responded “always” to the
second statement of the parent interview.
The third statement read: “I am confident and comfortable answering my
children’s questions about the Word of God.” This statement provided division among
the participants as 25 percent responded they were “not often” confident, but 50 percent
identified that they “often” felt comfortable, while 25 percent stated they were “always”
comfortable. The conclusion of the project reported that 90 percent reported that they
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were “always” comfortable, with the remaining 10 percent indicating that they were
“often” comfortable.
The fourth statement read: “I believe it is the church’s obligation to teach my
children principles for daily living from the Bible.” In the first implementation of the
parent interview, a few parents expressed confusion regarding this question. The writer
explained that this question was asking participants to express their attitudes concerning
the church’s role in teaching their children. Participants made their selection with no one
changing their answers. Thirty percent stated that it was “never” the church’s obligation
to teach their principles for daily living. Twenty-five percent responded “not often,”
while the remaining 50 percent responded “always.” In the concluding interview, 50
percent responded “always,” while 25 percent responded “often,” and the remaining 25
percent responded “not often.”
The fifth statement read: “I believe it is important to pray with my children at
least four times a week.” Ninety percent answered “always” to this statement, with the
remaining 10 percent answering “often.” All of the participants answered “always” in the
final interview. The final statement in this category read: “I depend on the church to be
the chief provider of Bible education to my children.” Ninety percent of the participants
responded “not often” to this statement, while 10 percent responded “never.” At the
conclusion of the project, the participants’ answers did not change.
The participants indicated that they had a desire to teach their children the
Word of God as instructed in Scripture. Participants’ cumulative average scores in the
attitude category increased three points from the pre-interview and post-interview (Figure
1). These scores agreed with the impressions the writer experienced in his interaction
with the participants. Each of the parents involved in this study believed that they had a
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responsibility. After biblical instruction, this belief was solidified and even became more
fervent.
Acuity
The second major area measured for this project was the participants’ acuity as
it relates to biblical knowledge. While it would be a daunting task to have a complete
understanding of a person’s biblical knowledge, the writer chose to examine aspects of
the six biblical truths that would be presented in the project. Participants were asked fill-
in-the blank questions so that answers could be assessed by the writer, and scores could
be given based on the quality of the answer. The writer rated each response with a score
from zero to four. If the participant responded with an answer that would need no further
explanation or exceeded the requirement of the question, then a score of four was given.
Answers that sufficiently answered the question were awarded three points, and answers
15.5
16
16.5
17
17.5
18
18.5
19
19.5
20
20.5
Figure 1Average Cumluative Score in the Attitude Section
Pre-Interview
Post-Interview
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that exhibited a working knowledge of the subject, but lacked components of a sufficient
answer were awarded two points. Participants who attempted to answer the question, but
provided a primarily inaccurate answer were awarded one point. Participants who left an
answer choice blank or responded that they did not know the answer were awarded zero
points.
The first question asked of the participants was: “What are God’s intentions in
providing mankind with the Bible?” In the pre-interview, the participants’ average
answer represented a sufficient knowledge; however, in the post-interview, the
participants’ average response indicated an exceptional knowledge. The participants were
asked to give an argument for the existence of God. The average response from the
participants in the pre-interview for this question indicated that the majority had a
working knowledge; however, in the post-interview, the participants’ displayed an
exceptional knowledge.
The final four questions of this section were: What was the purpose of Jesus
coming to earth? What does the Holy Spirit do? Can you identify one passage that tells us
that man is a sinner? What must a person do to accept God’s gift of eternal life?
Participants scored, on average, in the exceptional knowledge for each of these questions.
The writer expected a working knowledge from the participants, but was surprised to see
that the responses for the final four topics represented an exceptional knowledge. The
writer was pleased to see that a small increase in the acuity, indicating that the teaching
was beneficial. Figure 2 contrasts the average cumulative scores in the acuity section of
the pre- and and post-interviews. Only a one-and-a-half point differential existed between
the pre-interview and the post-interview. This represents a deeper than expected
comprehension of God’s Word.
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16
16.5
17
17.5
18
18.5
19
Figure 2Average Cumluative Score in the Acuity Section
Pre-Interview
Post-Interview
Activity
Participants’ attitudes toward teaching their children were very important; their
acuity was essential, but neither of those two categories would matter if the participants
would have been already doing what was presented in this project. Participants were
asked to respond to seven statements using the same Likert scale from the first section of
the parent interview. The purpose of these statements was to gauge accurately the
parents’ current level of participation in regard to the education of their children. The
statements ranged from the planning to the fulfillment of teaching spiritual truths.
The first statement parents were asked to respond to was: “I currently have a
plan or strategy for teaching my child precepts from God’s Word.” Over 60 percent of the
participants responded “not often” to the previous statement. However, 20 percent
responded “always” to this response.
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The second statement read: “I intentionally tell my children something about
God or the Bible more than once a week.” This question garnered the highest pre-
interview score with 90 percent responding “always.” The remaining 10 percent
responded “often.”
The third statement read: “I answer questions my children have about God, the
Bible, and/or Christian living.” Sixty percent of the participants responded “often,” while
the remaining 40 percent responded “always.”
The fourth statement read: “I look for opportunities to teach my children a
spiritual truth from God’s Word.” Sixty percent of the participants answered “often,”
while the other 40 percent was spilt between “not often” and “always.”
The fifth statement read: “I pray with my children four or more nights a week.”
Seventy percent of the participants responded “not often” to the previous statement.
Twenty-five percent responded “never” to the statement, while 5 percent responded
“always.”
The sixth statement posed resulted in the lowest responses. The statement read:
“I read the Bible to my children at least three times a week.” Ninety percent of the
participants responded “not often,” while the remaining 10 percent responded “never.”
The final statement read: “My children receive most of their spiritual education outside of
the home.” This statement was explained by the writer as the parents’ activity in taking
their children to church; however, the question was not amended in the parent interview.
Ninety percent of the participants responded “often,” while the remaining 10 percent
stated “not often.” The average cumulative score in this section rose four points from the
pre-interview to the post-interview, marking the highest change in response from one
category (Figure 3).
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The writer was pleased to see the increase in this section because of the
implications of the responses. This section shows a level of success in the project as the
participants increased their activity of teaching their children spiritual truths from God’s
Word. Additionally, this indicates that the parents were succeeding in fulfilling God’s
commands in Deuteronomy 6:4-9 at greater levels than what they were prior to the
implementation of this project. The average overall scores from the pre- and post-
interviews indicated an increase from the participants (Figure 4).
The final measurement device used in the project was the weekly journal
(Appendix 6). This tool was used primarily as the participants’ communication tool to the
writer to express how the Ready-made Object Lessons (Appendix 5) were completed
each week. While subjective in nature, this tool allowed the writer to view the
participants’ self-reports as to how their children’s education was progressing.
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Additionally, it allowed the writer to gauge how the introduction and role play of the
Ready-made Object Lessons would be conducted in the next session. The weekly journal
asked the participants to gauge their encounters with their child as profitable or not and
suggest improvements they could make or changes to the Ready-made Object Lessons.
As a way of planning and preparation, participants were expected to complete the
majority of the journal entry prior to teaching their children the biblical truth. The
remainder of the journal entry was to be completed after the teaching as a way of
reporting what had occurred and reflection of what could be done different or better the
next time the subject would be taught.
Goal Two
The second goal made by the writer included the report of how well the
research plan was prepared, how effectively the research was implemented, how much
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change was brought about in the ministry setting as a result of the research, and the
contribution this research has made to the parents’ abilities to be the spiritual educators in
the lives of their children. The following will report on each of these areas and include
the writer’s assessment of the ministry project.
Plan
The plan formulated by the writer was to meet six weeks with parents,
grandparents, or guardians who are the primary caregivers to children between the grades
of kindergarten and fourth grade. The approximate ages of the children will range
between five-to-ten years of age. Research participants were to be members or regular
attendees of The Ridge Baptist Church, Tate Springs Baptist Church, or any of the
ministries associated with the two churches. These participants were scheduled to meet
for six consecutive weeks at which time six different doctrinal topics were taught and the
Ready-made Object Lessons were introduced. Participants were given parent interviews
at the beginning of the project and again at the end of the project. Participants were asked
to complete weekly journals as a way to communicate their progress to the writer.
The project was completed as planned. The six sessions proved to be difficult
for participants, as each week participants were missing with some having to listen on-
line to the recorded sessions. One adjustment made during the project was in regard to the
teaching aspect. Originally the writer expected to have to spend more of the session time
on teaching biblical truths; however, after the examination of the pre-interviews, it
became apparent that the teaching needed to be presented differently than planned. The
writer shortened the lessons, but increased the depth of each lesson to give opportunities
for review and introduction to the deeper aspects of each truth. This was the greatest
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miscalculation the writer made in the development of the plan. However, this adjustment
appeared to produce some fruit as an increase was reported from the group in overall
acuity.
The time allowance for each session worked well for the participants and was
adequate for the writer to teach the biblical truth, review the previous week’s progress or
difficulties, and role play the Ready-made Object Lessons. After the first session, the
location was moved to the main church campus, as previously reported, and this proved
to be more efficient for the participants and the writer. The resources needed to complete
the session were provided by Tate Springs Baptist Church, and their assistance was
available for the entire project.
Implementation
Each session followed the same lesson plan, with each session introducing a
new biblical truth. The first session introduced the parent’s responsibilities, which led to
a lengthy explanation of Deuteronomy 6:4-9. The parents’ responsibilities of their
children’s education are vitally important to this study, but the teaching should have been
scheduled and time consideration given to proper introduction of the topic. The teaching
on Deuteronomy 6:4-9, coupled with the plan of teaching on the Bible, weighed down the
first session and may have kept the first session from being the best it could be.
Participants in this session were asked to complete the enrollment card (Appendix 3),
answer the parent interview, listen to two lessons, and be introduced to the Ready-made
Object Lessons. This appeared to be overwhelming for the parents, and prevented the
writer from being able to connect with the group as well as he had planned.
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The teaching aspects of the sessions were focused in the following areas and
were taught in the respected order: Bible, God, Jesus, the Holy Spirit, Man, and
Salvation. The topic order seemed to flow and make logical order. The placement of the
teaching within the session should have been moved back with a special emphasis to the
Ready-made Object Lessons made prior to the teaching. Participants would have
benefited earlier in the project if more time had been given to how the object lessons
were going to work within the scope of the teaching sessions. Instead, the writer
presented the teaching lesson separately, then made some attempts to tie the lessons and
teaching together at the end.
The verbal feedback from the participants was a lack of understanding of how
the teaching worked with the lessons. This was corrected by the writer in the third session
by making a note of the lessons and how the lessons and knowledge of the subject work
in tandem to produce the most fruitful result. An additional aspect regarding the sessions
is the preparation of the paperwork. The writer struggled early in the project to maintain a
clear order of all the materials involved. Better organization or condensing handouts
would have alleviated confusion and expedited the sessions.
The data provided by the parent interview served helpful for the understanding
of the participants’ aptitude and willingness to fulfill God’s command for parents. The
writer discovered that the participants’ unique relationships with their children
necessitated that a greater emphasis be placed on the Ready-Made Object Lessons as
being a guide to teaching children. Weekly journals were the most important
measurement tools the writer had to gauge subjectively the progress of the participants.
The journals did not contain a point value to objectify the data gathered, but rather
exhibited the participants attitude, acuity, and action. The journals were to be completed
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in two parts. The first four questions were to be completed prior to the teaching event,
and the final two questions were designed to be completed at the conclusion of the
participants’ interaction with their children.
The weekly journal asked the participants to report the biblical truth and
passage they taught to their children. Additionally, participants were responsible for
writing out how they planned to teach the truth to their children, as well as, considering
what they wanted their children to know at the conclusion of the lesson. In addition to
this, participants were asked if they were able to accomplish what they had planned to
achieve through their teaching.
The writer learned a number of things from the weekly journal. He learned that
the participants’ unique relationships with their children necessitated that he place a
greater emphasis to the parents that the Ready-made Object Lessons were a guide to
teaching children. The participants reported great success in the use of the Ready-made
Object Lessons, but also communicated adjustments made to fit their individual needs.
While the writer never intended for the Ready-made Object Lessons to be followed
exactly as written—but rather as a guide for parents to use, follow, and make their own—
it was not communicated well in the beginning. Additionally, the writer noted that
success was predicated by the completion of the weekly journal. Participants who
completed the weekly journal reported a successful interaction; however, all participants
who did not complete a weekly journal verbally communicated to the writer that they did
not achieve success, often citing lack of planning or a failure to have a clear educational
goal for their child as the reason for the lack of success.
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Leader Evaluation
The writer proposed the expectation of seeing the average score per section of
the parent interview increase an average of three points. Participants reported an average
increase of exactly three points in the attitude section. This indicated that the writer was
successful in communicating the necessity of parental leadership in the education of
elementary school-aged children. This reported growth demonstrates that the participants
received the information introduced primarily in the first session and repeated throughout
the other five sessions. Participants demonstrated their increased desire to be the primary
spiritual educators of their children through their responses in the post interview.
The acuity section of the parent interview showed a minimal increase of one-
and-a-half points. The writer attributes the failure toward goal achievement of an average
three-point increase to a higher-than-expected initial score on the parent interview.
Despite the failure to reach the expected goal, the writer was encouraged by the increase,
given the higher-than-expected initial scores. Additionally, participants were measured
by their report of activity in reference to their sharing and teaching biblical truths to their
children. This section also saw an average increase of three points.
Participants’ activity level was an area of great importance to the writer. The
hope for this writer was to see a significant increase in the parent’s activity of teaching
their children the Word of God. While a three-point differential between pre- and post-
test interviews was achieved, it was hoped that a greater increase would have occurred.
The writer was successful in motivating and equipping participants to be more purposeful
in how they communicated biblical truths to their children. The increase does provide
insight to increased activity and success within the project. The objective was reached in
two of the three sections of the parent interview, thus proving the leader’s ability to
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accomplish the primary intentions of the ministry project, which was to create an
excitement and to motivate parents to become their children’s primary spiritual educator.
While the writer achieved success in two categories, the shortcomings experienced in the
second section should be considered. The goal was missed by one-and-a half points on
average. The writer’s failure in this area should be considered in his attention to the pre-
interview scores and a refined emphasis on the doctrinal areas that showed the greatest
promise for increase.
Participants were asked to complete a leadership evaluation instrument
(Appendix 10). The participants strongly agreed that the researcher clearly communicated
the expectations of the project to the participants. Further, participants strongly agreed
that the researcher interacted well with the participants. Participants were asked if the
leader guided the participants in learning the biblical truths and how to share the truths
with children. All participants who completed the leadership evaluation strongly agreed
with the previous statement. Additionally, participants were asked to respond to the
statement: “The project leader provided adequate material to equip the participants in
fulfilling the project objective of sharing biblical truths to children.” Participants strongly
agreed with the previous statement. The participants also strongly agreed that the project
leader equipped the participants to fulfill God’s command in Deuteronomy 6:4-9.
Complete agreement was present among those who completed the leadership evaluation
that the project leader completed the objectives of this project.
Implications for Further Study
This ministry project allows for a number of different implications for further
study. The implications addressed in this section will include the possibility of a
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longitudinal study, the refining of the workshop format into a parenting class, additional
longitudinal considerations, and the reuse of this project as a workshop with corrections
made.
Participants from this study could be tracked, and their success or failure as
their child’s primary spiritual educator could be examined. This study could be tracked in
five-year increments for ten years with self-report instruments similar to the parent
interview, but with modifications made. Additionally, the writer would consider
constructing an instrument that the children could complete gauging the increase in their
spiritual knowledge. For this to work, parents would need to choose specific areas of
doctrine they wanted to teach so that these areas could be tracked. It would also be
necessary to work in cooperation with the children’s minister of their churches to know
what doctrinal areas were being taught in the children’s program and, if at all possible, to
maintain a separation between what is being taught at home versus the church.
Special consideration would need to be given to those children who attended
Christian schools, so that the differential could be made between what they were learning
from home opposed to what they were learning at school. For this current study to be
transformed into a longitudinal study, these instruments, assessments, and interviews
would have to be created. The children of the participants would also have to be included
in the study so that proper tracking could occur. Further, parents would have to report
their involvement through the use of weekly journals. In addition, more object lessons
would need to be created with a comprehensive consideration to the various doctrines and
biblical truths for daily living.
Another implication that may be useful would be to take the current format of
the workshop and transform it into a parenting class. This would necessitate the addition
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of other doctrinal topics, as well as Christian-living issues as made pertinent by the daily
culture. Classes would have to focus on the application of biblical truths as it relates to
the believer, then transition the teaching to how these truths could be communicated to
children using the Ready-made Object Lessons. The addition of more object lessons
would be necessary for the completion of this type of study. In this environment, the
participants would meet once a week for one hour, and the weekly journal would serve as
the primary gauge of progress. Revisions would need to be made to the journal so that it
could be used as a more objective instrument.
A longitudinal study could be constructed by seeking out parents of
kindergarteners from a ministry setting and offering either an annual parent workshop, or
weekly parenting classes during the church’s regular small group instruction time. This
instruction could continue for five years using many of the instruments made available
through this project, as well as the creation of a new instrument to gauge a fourth grader’s
biblical knowledge.
This study would work under the assumption that the families involved stayed
at the church during the length of the study, and that not all parents of kindergarteners
would choose to participate at all during the five-year period. At the conclusion of the
five-year period, the writer would test all fourth graders in the children’s ministry, with
the parents’ approval, in order to determine how the students whose parents participated
in the parent workshops or classes did as compared to those parents who did not
participate. An additional question to both the students and parents about the parents’
activity in teaching biblical truths at home would be crucial in accurate outcome to the
study.
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This project could be re-attempted in a workshop format. However, changes
would need to be made to the various components of the workshop. One may consider
issuing a survey to those who meet the criteria of having a child five-to-ten-years old to
determine the best time of year to hold the workshop and what time it should be held. The
parent interview would need to have revisions made, possibly adding more questions or
refining existing sections. Topics for consideration may need to be examined outside the
doctrinal issues presented. Parents may be struggling with other issues, and an
investigation as to what those topics are may result in more participants, greater
attendance, or even the quality of effort from the participants. The foundation and idea
presented in the ministry project is not completely flawed—nor does it lack value, but a
restructuring of certain aspects could be even more fruitful than the first attempt at this
ministry project.
Summary
The investigation of the importance of the parental role in the spiritual
education of elementary-school-aged children was a profitable study and time of growth
for the writer and participants of the ministry project. This research allowed the writer to
examine the parental role and responsibility God designed and to examine how this vital
function could be achieved in this day and age. The writer was blessed to examine the
Scripture and come to an understanding of God’s expectations on parents, and then have
the opportunity to share these biblical truths with parents who had a sincere desire to be
obedient to God’s command.
The writer learned through the ministry project that parents have a desire to do
what is right and to be obedient to God’s command. However, a clear direction or
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understanding of how to reach that destination eludes most parents. While this writer
possesses many shortcomings as father and servant of God; he has learned that there must
be a goal set. In this case, the goal of being the child’s primary spiritual educator must be
accomplished by the purposeful and intentional choice to share God’s Word with one’s
children. Parents speak to their children on a daily basis, but how often do parents initiate
or entice their children to discuss biblical truths? In the weekly journal, the question is
asked, “What do I want my child to learn, begin doing, or stop doing because of this
teaching?” The formulation of this question spoke to the writer’s heart, because it is the
core of what this writer learned. One must identify their goals—where they wish to end
up, if they intend on accomplishing the goals, hopes, and desires they set out to achieve.
A common speculation for the writer is the changes that would be made should
the opportunity present itself to redo the project. One of the changes that would be made
is that the number of sessions would be reduced to four. A greater emphasis would be
placed on teaching how to utilize the Ready-made Object Lessons to the greatest
potential. The parent interview would have some revisions made, one of which would be
changing question seven of the activity section; this question did not make sense within
the context of the other questions. Additional questions would be added to the activity
section to review how principles for Christian living are being taught in the home. It
appeared that the participants had an appropriate handle on major doctrinal areas;
therefore, an emphasis would have been placed on how to live in obedience to the
principles found in Scripture. These changes would increase the effectiveness for both the
parents and the children.
The writer believes that this ministry project was successful, because the
participants gained an awareness of God’s command—a command of which they
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otherwise were unaware. Additionally, this project was successful, because it equipped
the parents to fulfill their biblical responsibilities, accomplishing the goals that were
made. Finally, it was successful, because it connected parents to their children in a way
that had not previously taken place in their homes. The writer asserts that this project was
a success, but also believes that it could have been more successful. There were
additional people who fit the criteria that for one reason or another were not compelled
by the advertising to come and participate in the project. Other people attended either the
first or second session and did not return. The writer believes that changes mentioned in
the previous paragraph could have made an impact and possibly have retained some of
these participants. The project proved to be successful; it was a benefit to those who were
willing to follow the leadership of the Lord. Overall, the writer counts the time spent on
this project, time with participants, and the materials developed to have been worthwhile
and personally rewarding as well as pleasing to God.
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APPENDIX 1
PARENT QUESTIONNAIRE
Parents, please answer the following questions/statements by circling “ Yes” or “ No.”
Your answers will be kept strictly confidential and used solely as a basis for
substantiating the need for training and encouraging parents to have an active role in their
children’s discipleship.
I believe it is the church’s obligation to teach
my children principles for daily living from
the Bible.
Yes No
I am always confident and comfortable when
teaching my children the Word of God.
Yes No
I depend on the church to be the chief
provider of Bible education to my children.
Yes No
I do not believe that it is my responsibility to
teach my children stories from the Bible.
Yes No
I read the Bible to my children at least three
times a week.
Yes No
I tell my children something about God or
the Bible at least once a week.
Yes No
I pray with my children four or more nights a
week.
Yes No
My children receive most of their spiritual
education outside the home.
Yes No
I have a desire to teach my children the Bible
and its precepts, but feel inadequate to do so.
Yes No
I currently have a plan or strategy for
teaching my child precepts from God’s
Word.
Yes No
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APPENDIX 2
PARENT INTERVIEW
Please respond to the following statements or questions by circling the number that best
represents your answer: 1 = never, 2 = not often, 3 = often, 4 = always
Attitude
1. I have a desire to teach my children the Bible and its precepts,
but feel inadequate to do so. 1 2 3 4
2. I believe that it is my responsibility to teach my children
stories from the Bible.
1 2 3 4
3. I am confident and comfortable answering my children’s
questions about the Word of God. 1 2 3 4
4. I believe it is the church’s obligation to teach my children
principles for daily living from the Bible. 1 2 3 4
5. I believe it is important to pray with my children at least
four times a week. 1 2 3 4
6. I depend on the church to be the chief provider of Bible
education to my children. 1 2 3 4
Acuity|
1. What are God’s intentions in providing mankind with the Bible? ____________
_________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________
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2. Give an argument for the existence of God. _____________________________
_________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________
3. What was the purpose of Jesus coming to earth? _________________________
_________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________
4. What does the Holy Spirit do? ________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________
5. Can you identify one passage that tells us that man is a sinner? ______________
_________________________________________________________________
6. What must a person do to accept God’s gift of eternal life? __________________
_________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________
Activity
1. I currently have a plan or strategy for teaching my child
precepts from God’s Word. 1 2 3 4
2. I intentionally tell my children something about God or
the Bible more than once a week. 1 2 3 4
3. I answer questions my children have about God, the Bible
and/or Christian living. 1 2 3 4
4. I look for opportunities to teach my children a spiritual
truth from God’s Word. 1 2 3 4
5. I pray with my children four or more nights a week. 1 2 3 4
6. I read the Bible to my children at least three times a week. 1 2 3 4
7. My children receive most of their spiritual education
outside of the home. 1 2 3 4
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APPENDIX 3
ENROLLMENT CARD
Family #_____________
Father’s Information
Name: _____________________________________________________ Age __________
Address: _________________________________________________________________
Occupation: ______________________________________Ethnicity: ________________
Email: _____________________________________Phone: ________________________
Mother’s Information
Name: _____________________________________________________ Age __________
Address: _________________________________________________________________
Occupation: ______________________________________Ethnicity: ________________
Email: _____________________________________Phone: ________________________
Marital Status
Married Divorced Single Remarried
Children’s Information
Name-Age-Grade-Gender
1. _________________________________________________________________
2. _________________________________________________________________
3. _________________________________________________________________
4. _________________________________________________________________
I commit to attend all sessions, participate in the project, and complete an exit interview.
__________________________________ _________________________________
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APPENDIX 4
LESSON PLANS
Session 1
I. Prayer
II. Introduction of Scriptural Truth
III. Bible—God’s Inspired Word
IV. Why is the Bible Important?
V. Teaching my Children about the Bible
VI. Putting it into Action
VII. Prayer
Session 2
I. Prayer
II. Introduction of Scriptural Truth
III. God—Creator of Everything
IV. Application of Scriptural Truth
V. Practical Teaching
VI. Putting it into Action
VII. Prayer
Session 3
I. Prayer
II. Introduction of Scriptural Truth
III. Jesus—the Son of God—His Role and Purpose
IV. Application of Scriptural Truth
V. Practical Teaching
VI. Putting it into Action
VII. Prayer
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Session 4
I. Prayer
II. Introduction of Scriptural Truth
III. Holy Spirit—What He Does in the Believer’s Life
IV. Application of Scriptural Truth
V. Practical Teaching
VI. Putting it into Action
VII. Prayer
Session 5
I. Prayer
II. Introduction of Scriptural Truth
III. Man—His Nature and Results of Sin
IV. Application of Scriptural Truth
V. Practical Teaching
VI. Putting it into Action
VII. Prayer
Session 6
I. Prayer
II. Introduction of Scriptural Truth
III. Salvation—God’s Plan of Redemption for Man
IV. Application of Scriptural Truth
V. Practical Teaching
VI. Putting it into Action
VII. Prayer
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APPENDIX 5
READY-MADE OBJECT LESSONS
The following table is a list of topics, scriptures, objects, and explanations to assist
parents in teaching their children spiritual truths with objects that are readily available in
household settings.
Directions: Prayerfully consider a spiritual truth you would like to teach your child.
Study the passage and read the instructions associated with the topic. Anticipate the
questions your child will have and any words or additional knowledge you may need to
have. With the object or event in mind make plans to share the truth. Timing is important;
so you need to develop planned spontaneity. Be sure that you are selecting the best
possible time and location for your child to receive the truth that you will teach him or
her. These object lessons are tools for your use but consider your child’s unique
personality in your preparation.
Topic Object-
Event Passage Instructions
Bible Book 2 Peter 1:21;
2 Timothy 3:16
The Bible is a special book that God
wrote through men in order that we could
know Him. Take a moment to share with
your child that the Bible is more than just
another book. This topic could be
introduced at a bookstore or at home
while the child works on homework.
Bible Reminder Psalm 119:16
God wants us to remember His Word by
memorizing Scripture. Whether you are at
home or on the road, schedule a reminder
on your phone or place a post-it note with
some task so that your child can see it.
Take that moment to say “reminders are
great, because they help me to remember
things.” Then, explain that God says it is
important to remember His Word. Help
the child memorize Psalm 119:16.
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Conduct Salt and
Light
Matthew 5:13-
16
This truth can be taught at the dinner
table, while cooking, or any time you
want to point out light. This passage
points out the usefulness of the believer
fulfilling his/her purpose of bringing
honor and glory to God by obedient
living. Use salt and light as examples of
items that are useful as they fulfill their
purposes. Have the child think of ways
they personally can be useful for God.
Conduct Bad
Attitudes
Galatians 5:16-
21
Take advantage of a time when you see
someone exhibiting a bad attitude. This
could be a television show, someone in
public, or so forth. Use this opportunity to
talk about the various ways God does not
want people to act. Have the child think of
some ways they could change bad actions
they have done in the past (example:
instead of yelling, speak softly).
Conduct Television
Radio Psalm 101:3
Many television shows or songs on the
radio are available for us to watch and
hear. However, the Bible tells us that we
should be careful what we absorb into our
minds. Model for your children the right
type of programs to watch and songs to
which to listen. Point out why you only
watch and list the programs you watch.
Use this verse to show them why.
Conduct Clothes Colossians 3:8-
11
While helping your child dress, explain
how the Bible says we should take off
sinful actions and put on the right actions
just as we take dress and undress. Using
the illustration of removing clothing and
putting on new clothes, explain that we
have the ability, through God’s power, to
stop acting sinfully and to put on good
behavior.
Conduct Fruit Galatians 5:22-
26
When you are in the produce section of
the grocery store, or in the kitchen eating
fruit, explain to your children some of the
benefits fruit provides. Then, explain that,
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in the same manner fruit is good for us,
we can do things that will produce good
things in our life. Have the fruit of the
spirit memorized, and go through some of
those good behaviors. Have your child
think of some ways they could exhibit
good fruit with their behavior.
Creation Sun/
Moon Genesis 1
Look for an opportunity such as a lunar or
solar eclipse, or even a starry night or
sunshine-filled day to point out that God
created the earth. Try to excite your
child’s curiosity, and when they ask
questions, read the creation account in
Genesis 1.
Decisions TV/
TV Guide
Joshua 24:15
&
James 4:13-17
One makes a lot of choices in life, but one
must make the decision to make the right
choices. When you and your children are
sitting in front of the television, or
deciding to watch something, point out
that they can make good choices or bad
choices. Using the knowledge of the
passages listed, teach your child to make
the choice to serve the Lord. This should
be modeled for the child; give examples
of when you have made good and bad
choices.
Discipline Discipline Hebrews 12:7-
11
When disciplining your child, explain to
them why you are disciplining them. Help
them understand that God disciplines you
also. The child needs to know that
discipline is for the correction of bad
behaviors, and is something that is done
out of love.
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Evangelism
Running
Errands
Matthew
28:19-20
While running errands or even traveling,
explain to your children that it is the duty
of the believer to tell people about Jesus
everywhere they go. Model this activity
for your children by sharing the Gospel
message with someone with whom you
come in contact.
Evangelism
(lifestyle) Flashlight Matthew 5:16
This can be done at night, or maybe when
the electricity is out. Take a flashlight and
explain that just as the light shines in the
darkroom, so our actions can shine in the
places where we go. When we do the
things that honor God, others will see us,
and this is an opportunity for us to glorify
God. Have your child think of ways they
could act to bring honor to God.
Faith Chair Ephesians 2:8-
9
Tell your child that a chair reminds you a
lot of faith. When they ask why, explain
that a chair looks likes it could hold you
up. It has four legs to support you, and is
already standing by itself. The chair looks
like it could be a place where you could
sit down, but it is not until you put your
faith in that chair by sitting down on it
that you will know it can hold you up (sit
down in the chair). Explain that faith
works the same way. We do not know that
faith will save us until we put our trust in
Christ.
Favoritism M&M’s James 2:1-9
Give your child M & M’s for a treat.
Then, explain that we have something in
common with M & M’s. M & M’s look
different, and they come in many different
colors, but they all taste the same, because
they are all the same inside. We are like
M &M’s in that we all look different, but
we are the same inside. God views us all
the same way. He does not care if we are
red, yellow, brown, or blue. We are all the
same to Him. He does not favor one of us
over the other, and just like God does not
play favorites, neither should
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we play favorites. In fact, the Bible says it
is a sin when we are partial to one person
over another.
Friendship/
Salvation Friend
John 15:12-17
Romans 5:8
When talking about friends or maybe
having a friend over, tell your child about
Jesus’ command to love one another. Also
use this as an opportunity to explain the
friend we have in Jesus. Explain how the
greatest thing a person could do is lay
down their life for a friend. Then tell them
about how Jesus laid down His life for us.
Giving Giving/
Tithing Malachi 3:8-12
Fill out an offering envelope in front of
your children. Ask them if they know
what you are doing (anything to engage
them in conversation). When they ask
explain that you are giving your tithes and
offering. Explain the difference between
the tithe and offering. Then tell them why
it is so important to give. You can then
read to them the passage in Malachi and
tell them what God says when we do not
give.
Giving Giving/
Tithing
2 Corinthians
9:6-13
Follow up with your children after
worship about how important the offering
time is at church. Show your children an
offering envelope and explain to your
children that it is important to give and list
some of the practical reasons why the
church needs money (building, utilities,
supplies, curriculum, staff to teach, etc…).
Share with your child that our attitude
when we give is as important to God as
our giving. Tell them that God wants us to
be excited to give to Him. Be sure to
explain the difference between a tithe (ten
percent of one’s gross wages) and an
offering which is a freewill gift given
above and beyond the tithe.
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God
(creation) Eggs
Genesis 1:24-
25
When making eggs or anything involving
an egg use this opportunity to teach about
the proof of God’s existence. Ask your
child the famous question “which came
first the chicken or the egg?” Have fun
with them as they try to figure it out.
Then tell them the answer is the chicken!
Explain that God created everything.
Explain the difference between things that
are made and things that are created.
Example we can make things but we have
to use materials that God created; to truly
create something you have to make
something out of nothing.
God
(existence) Eggs
Genesis 1:24-
25; Psalm
19:1; Romans
1:20
Take advantage of a morning breakfast
and acquire the help of your children
while you are cooking. When making
eggs or using eggs ask your children;
“where did the chicken come from?”
“How did it come into existence?” Allow
your children to answer as best they can.
Then tell them you know how the chicken
came into existence. Explain that God
created everything and as we look around
us we see that everything on this earth had
to have a beginning. This egg is a witness
to the fact that there has to be something
greater, mightier, and more intelligent
than us to create something so complex.
This something that is so smart is God!
God
(existence) Fruit
Genesis 1;
Psalm 19:1
Everything came from somewhere. Take a
moment for you and your child to have a
snack (fruit specifically) and while
enjoying the break bring up that scientist
say that everything depends on something
to exist (fruit needs: trees, vines, etc…
Trees need air, sunlight). Affirm that as
we look around we can see that their
statement is true; then ask; “but where did
all the stuff originally come from? What
set it all in motion?” God! Let your
children know that God created
everything. Genesis 1 tells us exactly how
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He did it and what order He created
everything. Therefore, we can look at the
sky, trees, water and everything on the
earth and realize that there must be a God
who created all of this; specifically the
God of the Bible.
God
(existence)
Mowing
the Lawn/
Yard
Work
Romans 1:18-
20
Psalm 19:1
Have the entire family come together for
yard work. After a while, take a break and
talk about the grass, flowers, birds, and
everything else you see in nature and
explain how God created every single
thing. We can know that God is real
through His creation. Where else could
the trees, birds, grass, etc.,
come from unless God created it?
God
(guidance) GPS/Map Proverbs 3:5-6
While traveling point out to your children
how the GPS or map shows you the path
to get to your destination. Explain that if
we trust in God and follow His path for us
we will arrive at the destination of a God-
honoring life. Have your child think of
some areas that they could trust God and
use His guidance.
God
(guidance)
Planner/
Calendar Jeremiah 1:1-8
Think ahead to event or trip you are
planning to take. Use this to help your
children learn about planning for an
activity (e.g. packing). Then seize the
opportunity to explain that God had a plan
for each one of us before we were ever
born. His desire for each of us is the same,
in that we were created to bring honor and
glory to God.
God
(guidance)
Planner/
Calendar Jeremiah 29:11
Follow up on the Jeremiah 1:1-8 passage.
Remind your child of the lesson they had
already learned about God’s plan. God’s
plan is to bring us to the greatest possible
outcome to please Him. This may not
always mean that we get what we want;
instead God will use events in our life so
that we are able to honor and glorify God
through our life.
God (order)
Putting
away toys,
dishes
1 Cor. 14:33
When cleaning the dishes or the children’s
room talk to your children about the
importance of order and cleanliness.
Explain that God cares about order and
that proper order should be characteristic
of everything we do. This is another way
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we can worship God by the way we live.
God (pro-
visions)
Rain/
Thunder-
storm
Genesis 6:1-
8:22
Take advantage of the next thunderstorm
or rain event and tell your children about
the time it rained forty days and nights.
Explain how God made provisions for
Noah and his family to be saved from the
flood. You can also talk about the faith it
took to build the ark even though it had
never rained before.
Holy Spirit
Child as
Helper
John 14:15-18,
25-26
Ask your child to assist you in some
household chore. Thank them for being
your helper. Then tell them that God has
given us a helper called the Holy Spirit.
When the believer receives God’s gift of
eternal life the Holy Spirit lives inside
them. The Holy Spirit has a couple of jobs
but the main job is to help and guide us as
we live for Him.
Hydrologic
Cycle
Rain,
Thunder-
storm
Job 36:27-28
Working with older children through their
science class; show them how the
hydrologic cycle was in the pages of the
Bible long before it made its way into the
pages of the textbook. Use this
opportunity to prove the existence and
wisdom of God. Examine your child’s
science textbook to find the section on the
hydrologic cycle.
Jesus
(Good
Shepherd)
Candy
Cane John 10:11-15
Tell your child that tradition holds that
candy makers long ago made the candy
cane in the shape that is in on purpose to
make it look like a shepherds crook. That
way at Christmas time while the thoughts
were on the birth of Jesus people could
remember the work of Christ in His life.
The reminder for everyone is that Jesus is
the Good Shepherd. He is the Good
Shepherd in that He loves and cares for
His sheep (mankind) and that He, like a
good shepherd will lay down His life for
His sheep which He did on the cross.
Explain that Jesus died on the cross to
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provide protection for us against the
penalty of sin that is like the wolf that
looks to attack the sheep.
Jesus Christmas Luke 2:1-7
Before any present is open in your home
for Christmas take a brief moment and
read Luke 2:1-7. Briefly explain that Jesus
is the reason for Christmas and He is the
greatest gift that God has given us.
Jesus Easter
Matthew
27:35-50;
28:1-8
Before any Easter celebration takes place
spend a moment and explain that Jesus
died on the cross to pay the sins of
mankind. Then read Matthew 28:1-8 and
explain that at Easter we celebrate the fact
that Jesus rose from the dead; defeating
death and the grave.
Jesus
(relation-
ship with)
Door Revelation
3:20
When knocking on a door or maybe
cleaning a door with your child, explain
that the Bible said that Jesus knocked on a
door. When you receive a puzzled look,
tell the children that Jesus said that He is
standing at the door knocking, wanting to
have a relationship with the believers of
the church. The same is true for us; Jesus
wants to have a relationship with us, and
we can do that by being obedient and
praying to Him.
Jesus
(who He is)
Family
Pictures John 20:31
Look through an old family album with
your children. Point out people they do
not know. After awhile, tell them there is
someone else who is really important to
your family that they may not know
about. Then tell them about Jesus and His
purpose on earth to die on the cross and
rise from the dead.
Joy Good Day Psalm 126:3
At the end of a great day, tell your
children that God desires for them to have
the kind of joy you feel right now every
day. Even on “bad” days, God wants us to
have joy in our hearts, and we can and
should because of the blessings He has
provided us. Have the children think of
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one thing about which they could be
joyful.
Joy/Serving Toys Psalm 100:1-5
As your children play with toys, ask them
if they are having fun and enjoying their
toys. When they answer “yes,” tell them
that, while playing with toys brings us a
lot of joy and happiness, the greatest joy
we can have is in serving others. Have the
children think of a way they could serve
someone else.
Judging Pictures Luke 6:37-42;
Matthew 7:1-5
Sit down with your children and look at
some pictures together. Point out the old
clothes or hairstyles and say, “there is a
danger in looking at people sometimes.”
This will most likely evoke a question
from your child. When they ask why, tell
them that when we view others a
temptation to judge can be present. God
does not want us to judge anyone.
Life
(God’s
plan)
Legos Jeremiah 29
Take some time with your child to build a
Lego toy. Before you get started take the
directions out and show them to your
child. Directions are really important if
we hope to end up with what we hope to
build. The directions tell us what we need
to do and when we need to do it; they are
very helpful. If we obey the directions we
will end up with what we hope for. God
gave us instruction for living and the plan
that He has for us is a good plan that will
give us what is best for our life. God’s
instructions for us are found in the Bible
and if we will obey the instructions we
will bring honor and glory to God.
Love Table Matthew 9:10-
13
When sitting at the dinner table, explain
that one time people criticized Jesus for
the table at which He sat. This should
evoke a question from the children.
Continue to say that Jesus sat at a table
with a bunch of sinners— lowlifes with
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whom no one wanted to hang out.
However, Jesus loves everyone, and made
Himself available for each of us.
Man Mirror Genesis 1:26
When brushing your children’s teeth, talk
about the reflection of the image and how
they can view their own image in the
glass. Explain that we can even see God in
ourselves, because He made us in His
image. While God does not possess
physical features like us, we are made in
the image of God in that we have life,
personality, truth, wisdom, love, holiness,
and justice.
Man Mistakes Romans 3:23;
Ephesians 4:32
When either you or your children make a
mistake, use the opportunity to explain
that no one is perfect. We all make
mistakes and sin against God. Sin
separates us from God, but we can always
ask for forgiveness and be reconciled back
to Him.
Mercy Laundry Lamentations
3:21-23
While folding clothes with your children,
tell them that God’s mercy is kind of like
our clothes. Just as we wear our clothes
and get them dirty, we can then wash
them and they are like brand new. Each
day, God makes His mercy new for us.
This means He is willing to love us and
offer forgiveness no matter how dirty we
may get.
Money Bank Haggai 2:8
Take your children with you to the bank.
Explain to them that the bank is a place
where people go to deposit and withdraw
money. Even though it may seem like the
bank has all the money, really God is the
owner of all the money, gold, and silver
this world has to offer. Therefore, nothing
that we really have is ours; everything
belongs to God.
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Money
(and
objects)
Anything Deuteronomy
10:12-14
Point out anything in your house or car to
your children and explain that the Bible
says that everything belongs to God. Ask
them “if everything belongs to God,
should you be willing to give to God
whatever He asks?” Allow them to
answer the question and discuss what it
means to give to God. Ask them if they
can think of anything they could give to
bring honor and glory to God.
Obedience Rainbow Genesis 9:8-17
After a storm, look to find the rainbow
present in the sky and point it out to your
children. Tell them about the first rainbow
and how God gave it as a promise to man
that He would never again destroy the
earth by a flood. While we enjoy the
promise today, we should never forget it
was man’s disobedience that caused the
judgment of God. Additionally, this
should help us to remember the judgment
that comes upon the disobedient.
Obedience
Speed
Limit
Signs
Romans 13:1-7
While driving, point out to your children
the traffic signs and who institutes the
rules of the road. Point out that, even
though we may not agree with all the rules
and laws, our responsibility is to pray for
our government officials as God has
allowed them to hold the positions of
authority in which they are serving.
Obedience
Speed
Limit
Signs
Luke 6:46-49
While in the car, point out some of the
traffic signs or warning signs you see. Ask
your children why it is important to obey
the signs. Allow them to answer at length
and ask you questions if necessary.
Explain that God gives us warnings and
directions in His word (the Bible).
Following the signs on the road keeps us
safe and helps us get to where we need to
go. Following God’s Word will keep us
safe and allow us to live a life that
glorifies God. Ask your children if they
know at least one thing that God has
instructed people to do in the Bible. If
they struggle, try to help them along with
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the Ten Commandments or any other
portion of Scripture you find helpful.
Obedience
(to parents)
Mom and
Dad
Exodus 20:12;
Ephesians 6:1-
3
Talk to your children about the
grandparents and explain to them that
their grandparents are you and your
spouses’ moms and dads. Tell them about
how important it was for you to obey
them. Then teach your children that it is
not just important to you that they obey
you, but that it is important to God as
well.
Praise/
Worship List Ephesians 1:3
Make a list—whether it is a grocery list or
household list—and display it in a place
your child will see it (you may even
request that they read or look for an item
on the list). Tell them that making a list is
really important, because you might forget
something without it. Then, tell them that
we can praise and worship God by making
a list. We can list the blessings or those
nice things God has done for us. We can
remember those blessings and thank Him
for each one. Have your child write down
a couple of God’s blessings; then, lead
your child in prayer to thank Him.
Prayer Phone Philippians
4:5-6
Ask your child to bring you the phone and
declare that you need to make a call to
someone. Tell your child that you are
thankful for the phone, because it is really
great to be able to talk to people who are
miles away. Ask them what they like
about calling people. Then, tell them that
prayer is kind of like a phone. Prayer is
the way people can communicate
gratitude, praise, and requests to God. We
can talk to God anytime we wish; we just
simply need to speak to Him. Help your
children pray by modeling for and leading
them in prayer.
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Priorities Legos Matthew 6:19-
33, 10:34-39
While playing Legos with your child point
out that each Lego brick has a limited
number of snaps. Explain that it is very
important that you use each snap wisely
on the Lego brick. Then tell them that our
life is like a Lego brick in that we only
have a limited amount of time each day.
In fact, we can think of ourselves as a
Lego brick and the snaps on the Lego as
our time. Therefore, it is really important
that we use our time doing the things God
would want us to do; because once you
snap the Lego brick into place the same
snap cannot be used somewhere else at the
same time. That is why we must do first
things first and God told us in the Bible
what should always come first (Matthew
6:33).
Salvation Family
Pictures
John 1:12;
Romans 10:9
When looking over family albums, teach
your children about their family (e.g. who
is whose child). Then tell them that God
has a family and wants them to be part of
it. Read John 1:12 first; explain that we
have the power to be in God’s family,
because Jesus died on the cross for us.
Complete the teaching by showing or
quoting Romans 10:9 and asking them if
they would like to receive Christ as
Savior.
Salvation Money Luke 12:6-7 &
Romans 5:8
When purchasing something or rewarding
the children after a job well done, use the
opportunity to express God’s view of
people. Tell your children that God values
us so much that He paid the price for us; if
we will believe in Him, we can receive the
gift of eternal life.
Salvation Cleaning
supplies 1 John 1:9
Employ the services of your children
while cleaning up after dinner. Make the
comment as you use cleaner to wipe the
table that Jesus and cleaning supplies have
something in common. Cleaning supplies
can cleanse our table of dirt and germs
just like Jesus can forgive us our sins and
cleanse us from unrighteousness. Ask
your child if they have ever asked Jesus to
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forgive their sins.
Salvation
Door
John 10:7-10
When your child (or family) comes in
from outside, have your child close the
door. After the child closes the door, ask
them why we close the door. If needed,
explain that the door is something we can
open to welcome people into our home.
Jesus said in the Bible that He is a door,
and He wants us to go through His door.
If we choose to go through His door, we
can receive the gift of eternal life and be
saved. In fact, we must go through Jesus if
we want to be saved.
Salvation Laundry Revelation 1:5-
Romans 10:9
While doing laundry with your children,
explain that our clothes are like a really
important truth in the Bible. Just as our
clothes get dirty and need to be washed,
so are we dirty because of the sin we
commit. However, just as the clothes are
washed and freed of dirt, so can the sin be
washed from us by asking Jesus to come
into our hearts and forgive us from our
sins.
Salvation Bread John 6:35-40
While eating a meal (preferably
something with bread), tell your children
that Jesus said that He was the bread of
life. Explain that regular bread helps
sustain life temporarily, but Jesus as the
bread of life gives everlasting life. All we
must do to come to Jesus is admit our
sins, believe in Him, and confess our sins,
and He will give us everlasting life.
Salvation Gift
Ephesians 2:8-
9;
Romans 10:9
After a birthday, Christmas, or gift-giving
event, talk to your children about
receiving gifts. Ask them to tell you about
their favorite gift. Then, ask them how
much they had to pay for the gift. When
125
they tell you nothing, tell them that God
has made a gift available to each and
every one of us. God’s gift is the gift of
eternal life. We need God’s gift, because
we cannot earn and do not deserve eternal
life. Ask your child if they would like to
receive the gift of eternal life by asking
Jesus to come into their heart and forgive
them of their sins. Read Romans 10:9, and
if your child is ready, lead them in a
prayer to receive Christ.
Salvation Wages Romans 6:23;
10:9, 13
Have your child perform a task with the
understanding that they will receive a
“wage” for doing the activity. After the
child completes the activity, give them the
money promised and explain that this was
their wages for completing the task. Share
with them Romans 6:23 and explain that
our activity of sin is the reason why one
day we will all die, but that God has given
us a gift. This gift is something we cannot
buy with our money; it is something from
God. The gift God offers is eternal life.
Ask your child if they would like to
receive God’s gift of eternal life. If they
answer “yes,” share Romans 10:9, 13 with
them and lead them in a prayer to accept
Christ as Savior.
Service Serving
Dinner Joshua 24:15
Have your children set the table. Ask
them if they had a choice to set the table.
When they say “no,” affirm their answer,
but tell them they acted well, because they
were obedient. Then tell them that we
have a choice every day of whether or not
we will serve God, and that we have to
make that choice every day with our
actions. Have the children list one way
they can serve God before the day is over.
Spiritual
Gifts Tools Romans 12:3-8
While fixing something around the house
or making a meal point out the tools you
are using to complete the job. Ask your
child what the tool your using is for
(example: hammer); then ask them if
126
another tool would be helpful (example a
whisk). Once they answer “no” explain
that God has given each of us gifts that we
can use to bring honor and glory to Him.
These gifts are things that God has made
us good at doing. Have the children think
of something they are good at and how
they could honor God with that gift.
Thankful-
ness
Thanks-
giving
Day
Psalm 107:1
Before or after the crowds of family or
friends take a quiet moment with your
child to tell them some of the things you
are thankful for. Have your child mention
some of the things they are thankful for.
Tell your child that we should be thankful
for God because His love will never end.
Thankful-
ness
Thanks-
giving
Day
Luke 17:11-19
When talking about giving thanks tell
your children about Jesus healing the ten
lepers. You can either focus on how to be
thankful like the one leper or what kept
the other nine from giving thanks.
Trinity Egg 1 John 5:7
When baking or cooking, involve your
children to teach them this truth about
God. Make something that requires an
egg. Then, tell your children that an egg
reminds you a little bit of God. Explain
that one God exists, but He is three
distinct persons: God the Father, God the
Son and God the Holy Spirit; yet they are
all one God. Just like an egg has three
separate parts: egg shell, egg yolk, and
egg white. All three of these parts of the
egg are different; yet, all the components
still are an egg. In the same way, God has
three distinct personages, but is one God.
Trust Bad day Genesis 50:20
If either you or your child is having a bad
day, use it as an opportunity to teach them
how God may allow “bad” things to occur
to fulfill a greater purpose. Review and
share with them the story of Joseph, and
show them how God allowed Joseph to
have a lot of bad days and how God used
127
those bad days to save Joseph and his
entire family. In the end, God used the
bad days to fulfill His purpose for Joseph,
and God received glory and honor through
the difficult time.
Worship Dinner
Table
1 Corinthians
10:31
While at the dinner table with your
children, ask them if they knew that they
could bring glory to God even while
eating. The children will most likely
answer “no.” Then ask if they know what
it means to bring glory to God. Tell them
that bringing glory to God is what we do
when we thank Him; obey Him or
anything else that He has commanded.
Explain that we can bring glory to God in
everything we do—whether it is eating
with good manners, praying before we
eat, or picking up our dishes when we are
done eating. Have the kids list one way
they can bring glory to God. Challenge
your children to memorize 1 Corinthians
10:31 and recite it after asking God’s
blessings on the meal. Occasionally
follow up by asking them to tell you how
they can bring glory to God.
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APPENDIX 6
WEEKLY JOURNAL
Parents, please complete and submit the following journal each week.
Biblical truth:
______________________________________________________________________
Bible passage:
______________________________________________________________________
How do I plan to teach this truth to my child? _________________________________
______________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________
What do I want my child to learn, begin doing, or stop doing because of this teaching?
_______________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________
Did you accomplish what you hoped to achieve in your teaching? (Yes or no, and please
explain.)
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Is there anything you would do differently if you were to repeat this activity? ________
________________________________________________________________________
129
APPENDIX 7
PROJECT ADVERTISEMENT POSTERS
This poster’s size was 18”x 24” and displayed in multiple locations at The Ridge Baptist
Church, Tate Springs Baptist Church, and Tate Springs Christian School.
130
APPENDIX 8
PROJECT ADVERTISEMENT BULLETIN INSERTS
This document was inserted into the bulletin distributed Sunday September 11th
to both
Tate Springs Baptist Church and The Ridge Baptist Church.
131
APPENDIX 9
PROJECT ADVERTISEMENT FLYERS
This advertisement document was printed at 8½ by 11 inches on 28-pound premium color
laser paper and distributed to all the classrooms in the Christian school, Tate Springs
Sunday School classes and the congregation of The Ridge Baptist Church.
132
APPENDIX 10
LEADERSHIP EVALUATION
Respond to the statements below using the following scale:
1-Disagree, 2-Somewhat Disagree, 3-Agree, 4-Somewhat Agree, 5-Strongly Agree
1. The project leader clearly communicated the expectations of the project to the
participants. ___
2. The project leader interacted well with the participants. ___
3. The project leader guided the participants in learning the biblical truths and how
to share those truths with children. ___
4. The project leader provided adequate material to equip the participant in fulfilling
the project objective of sharing biblical truths to children. ___
5. The project leader equipped the participant to fulfill God’s command in
Deuteronomy 6:4-9. ___
133
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